Episode Transcript
Celebrity impersonation scams drain billions from fans.
Well, I didn't see this one coming.
Disney and Open Ai team up to let fans create AI videos with Disney characters.
A new smart ring turns your finger into a memory button.
Plus your tech questions answered.
What's going on?
I'm Rich Demiro and this is Rich on Tech.
This is the show where I tech talk about the tech stuff I think you should know about.
It's also the place where I answer your questions about technology.
I believe that tech should be interesting, useful, and fun.
Let's open up those phone lines at triple eight Rich one oh one.
That's eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
Give me a call.
If you have a question about technology.
Email is also open.
You love to email me, Just go to Richontech dot TV hit contact.
That will get your message to my screen.
We got a couple of guests this week.
Peter Kafka, chief correspondent at Business Insider, is going to break down that whole big deal between Netflix and Warner Brothers, and now Paramount's trying to squeeze in there as well.
Later, we've got Nick Merrill, he's gonna explain he's got a new carrier, new wireless carrier they just launched.
It's called Freely pH R E E L I Freely like speak Freely.
It's a privacy first carrier sign up.
I think they only require a ZIP code.
That's it.
That's interesting.
And then later on Roberto Baldwin, he is a mobility journalist.
He's going to talk about some of the trends in the transportation world.
Well, I hope you are having a fantastic day.
It is the holiday season.
I am doing great wearing my Windows Ugly Christmas sweater.
So if you're tuning in on the stream, it's not live stream, but on KTLA Plus we stream the first ten minutes of the show every week.
You can download that app just about anywhere.
You can see what I'm wearing.
And it is the For a couple of years now, Microsoft has sent me their annual Ugly Christmas sweater.
I hate to call it an ugly Christmas sweater because I think it's great.
It's got Clippy on it, it's got all their icons from over the years.
It's so great.
Oh, it's a fun one.
It's funny.
I get sent so many ugly Christmas sweaters.
Every party I go to I get to wear one of them, and it's always a conversation starter.
But this week I went to Amazon Studios.
Amazon.
It's just truly unbelievable what they've done.
So when I was in college, I interned at these studios.
It used to be called Culver Studios, I believe.
And the house you might recognize it, I believe.
Don't quote me on this.
I believe it's the house from Gone with the Wind.
I'm pretty sure that's or it inspired it or something.
I should really look up this stuff before I let me say Gone.
I'm pretty sure.
Let's see correct.
The famous Tarra mansion from Gone with the Wind was a temporary set built on the backlot of Culver Studios.
So I interned there.
Back when I was in college, it was Columbia TriStar and it was just a regular studio.
Now it is Amazon.
It is impressive what they've done with this place.
I was there for an event.
They were showing off their new Echo speakers that just came out.
There's smaller than before.
There's two of them.
They've got the Echo Studio and then they've got the Echo dot Max.
Now, don't let the name of the echo dot max deceive you.
It is still a very small echo device.
And so I did a whole demo.
We went into a sound studio where they had the demo with all these things linked up to the fire TV.
And I did not know this, but you can link up to five of these speakers with an Amazon fireTV.
Now it has to be very particular.
You have to have one of the recent generation fireTV sticks most of them, I think are the four K versions in the last couple of years.
And also you can link them up to a fireTV cube and it has to be a certain generation.
I believe it's a third generation.
But I got through this demo and I'm sitting there, I'm like, wait a second.
You can do surround sound just by plugging in a couple speakers around a room without running all these wires and cables and speaker wire and all this stuff.
Said, hold on, I want to try this.
And so the programming also included a fireside chat with OSCAR winning composer Chris Bauers.
Young guy, great guy, very cool.
He did the audio for Wild Robot or I guess I should say soundtrack for Wild Robot and also The Last Repair Shop, which I've not seen.
I did see Wild Robot.
It was incredible, and he just talked about how sound shapes what we see on the screen, and how of course, because it was an Amazon event and they're promoting this immersive audio, he talked about how immersive audio is changing storytelling.
So he said two things that I really like.
Number one, he said, sound shapes what we see.
There's so much about sound we don't realize that defines how we experience a story.
And think about that when you're watching a horror movie.
The music, the way the things happen in the background or in the corners of the screen, or the jump scares that drives the storyline.
Just what you hear, what they're playing in the background as a character is doing something, affects not only how you feel about what's happening on screen, but how you feel personally.
Are you scared, are you tired, are you angry?
Are you happy?
So that was really interesting.
And then the other one was on creativity, which I really liked too.
He said, I chase the naivete of being a kid when you're young.
Fear doesn't stop you.
You just try things now.
That one really resonated with me, because the last time I was at those studios, I was a college student and I was fearless.
I mean, of course I respected my elders, but I was going to conquer the world back then.
Now I will say, I'm very happy with what I've done in life, but as an adult, I don't take half the risks I took as a kid.
I call myself a kid, but as a college student, I would cold call people, I would email people, I would send my resume to jobs that I had no reason to be hired for whatsoever.
And nowadays, of course, it's just not that way.
And so I loved what he said.
I chase the naivety of being a kid when you're young, Fear doesn't stop you.
You just try things.
And I see that in one of my kids, actually probably both, but my older kid, he's fourteen, and he's just ready to take on the world, kind of like the way I felt when I was a kid, where I was going to do better than my parents.
That's the way he feels about me, which is ironic because I feel like I've done pretty decent for what I wanted, what I set out to do anyway.
So they showed us, you know, the fireside presentation.
Then they showed us a clip of a movie with these speakers, and it sounded great, and I immediately they sent us home with one of the speakers.
I connected it to my fire Cube, I dusted off the dust, I did all the software updates, and I connected this thing and I was like, oh MG, this sounds incredible.
And I immediately went on Amazon and ordered three more of the speakers to build out the full round.
But I made a mistake that I did not realize until I got the speaker.
So I got you know where I live, you get stuff so quick from Amazon.
So it came the next day, next morning, basically, and I set them all up.
And I realized I was not being able to set up all four of them together.
It just would only show me two at a time.
And I realized I bought two of the big speakers and two of the small, or I had two of the big two of the small.
And I looked, of course, typical guy.
I look in the directions afterwards, and it's like, oh no, all speakers have to be the same.
You have to buy either four of the big ones or four of the small ones.
So my little mix and match thing did not work.
And I didn't realize that until I read the help page, which, by the way, read the help page in advance before you do something like this.
So I went back on Amazon.
I said, okay, I got to order two more of these speakers.
Amazon cut me off the website literally said sorry, you've reached your purchase limit for these speakers.
I said, what, So okay, So I couldn't order those the big ones.
I had to order the smaller ones, and I had to order them in a different color.
That's the only way it would let me order more.
And so now I've got so many of these speakers at my house.
I set them up.
Last night we watched our first movie.
I was expecting it to be f one.
It was not, because we ended up watching a holiday movie.
But it just sounded great and it was so easy.
I'm very impressed.
So if you have my thesis here, if you have an Amazon fireTV, check the help page.
I'll link it up on the website.
Rich on tech dot tv.
If you can connect a couple of these echo speakers to your device, I'm not kidding.
It changes everything.
And by the way, you get all the benefits of having smart speakers in your living room, which I know some people like, some people don't.
But you know, this morning, I was just able to call out what I wanted to listen to, ask Alex of questions, all kinds of stuff because these speakers are now in my living room.
And by the way, I've had Sonos for many years, and I thought about it.
Sonos has sort of been keeping me from being on the cutting edge with all of this smart speaker stuff because I've been so invested in what they've done, and they've been way behind the eight ball.
I guess, okay, are you behind the eight ball when you're bad at something or you're behind Okay, so they're bad.
They've been bad about the smart speaker stuff.
It's just it's not very good.
So now I feel like I am very much.
I can't wait to watch more movies.
So check it out.
I'll link it up on the website.
I also figured out fire TV auto plays a whole bunch of ads when you first turn on your screen.
I don't like that.
You can go into your settings and turn that off.
Did you know that?
No, they're not going to advertise that to you.
So go into your settings preferences featured Content, and you'll see two options to turn off auto auto play for video and auto play for audio.
You can mix and match those two, but I turn them all off.
So now my screen still shows ads, which, okay, what are you gonna do?
But it's much easier on the eyes and the ears when you first turn it on less Jarring rich on tech dot TV.
I'll link up all this information there.
Rich on tech dot tv eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one eight eight eight rich one oh one.
We are gonna take your calls right after this.
I meant to tell you earlier, ran out of time, but I want to tell you about the other systems that can do this with the speakers.
So Apple TV, if you have that, you can connect home pods, Roku TV, not Roku players, but Roku TV.
They've got these Roku wireless speakers you can add.
And then TCL has this thing called Dolby at most flex connect.
So that's a new thing that I guess more TVs are probably gonna adopt over the years, but they're the first out of the gate with it.
I love the name of the speakers, z one hundred wireless speakers like our station in New York.
I love it.
We're not on that station.
I mean, we have a station, a prominent radio station in New York, and I did see those at the Denver CDA show and very easy to set up Google TV streamer.
That's Google's version of all this stuff.
I cannot find any documentation that says you can add speakers to that.
Minus you could add Bluetooth speakers, for sure, but I'm not sure that their Nest speakers work with it.
So anyway, lots of options out there other than just getting a third party soundbar with all that good stuff.
All right, let's go to Let's go to Brian in Atlanta.
Brian, you're on with Rich.
Speaker 2Hey, how you doing?
Speaker 1I'm doing well?
What can I help you with?
Speaker 3I got a new Comcast or Extinity router, and my old iPads and a couple of old laptops will no longer connect, and I'm wondering if there's anything I can do.
Speaker 1About Ooh, okay, so you're saying the word old.
So I'm guessing immediately that your Wi Fi router is putting out a five gigahertz signal and your your iPads are probably on the old two point four, That's what I'm guessing.
Speaker 3Yes, the router does both a five and a two point whatever.
Speaker 1Yeah, okay does Yeah.
So when you when you go on that iPad, do you see well, first off, did you use the same SSID, like the same Wi Fi network name and password on your new router or no?
Speaker 2Oh boy, I don't know.
Speaker 1Well, like, when you connect on it, is it the same whatever your Wi Fi network name was.
Is it the same as before?
Is just something different?
Speaker 3The slower speed is the same, the five G.
Speaker 4Has got a new name.
Speaker 1Okay, So it sounds to me like maybe these iPads are trying to connect to the old network.
So you have to go in there, go in your list of networks and delete the old network and then try to reconnect them.
I think that's going to work.
So if you go into settings on these I'm doing this on the iPhone, but I think it's the same.
You go to settings, you go to Wi Fi, and then you go into let's see edit in the upper right hand corner.
Speaker 3Okay, when I'm on Wi Fi.
Speaker 1You don't have to be on Wi Fi to do this just yet.
You can just do this on your iPad, but just go you know, make sure the WiFi is turned on, but just again go to settings Wi Fi and then the upper right hand corner.
If you're on now, it's a little bit different.
I'm on iOS twenty six.
If you're not.
If these iPads are running older software, there may be a different way to do this.
But you basically have to find a way to look at your saved networks and so on the new iPhone, it just says edit or no networks, and then you go in there.
You'll see a whole list of all the saved networks.
Find your old network and delete it.
Press the little red button and delete it.
So I'm looking at mine.
I've got hundreds of networks saved on my iPhone.
Everything for my barber shop, to Snap when I went to their offices, to Samsung, to all the very I got a lot of stuff.
I gotta clean this up.
But I think it's getting confused because it's still trying to use the old credentials on the new network that might have the same name.
So go in there, delete the saved networks and if I'm just seeing saved Wi Fi.
Speaker 3The new network has a different IP address or what No, I.
Speaker 1Think it's just it might have a different password but the same name, and I think it's just messing it up.
And I think in general, if you forget that network, it's probably going to be better just to do that.
Okay, So I'm looking at the uh yeah on the Wi Fi on the Apple.
Okay, let's see settings Wi Fi.
Yeah, So that's the thing you need to do.
You need to find your old network and reset it.
Now if none of that works, if you can't figure out how to do that, there's something called the network settings network settings reset.
So if you go on your iPad and find that setting, you can reset all of those settings and then it'll probably find the new network that way.
So I'll tell you where that is.
That's under settings General.
Scroll all the way down where it says transfer or reset.
You tap that, and then you say, you tap reset one more time, and you'll get a whole bunch of options reset all settings, reset, network settings reset, there's a whole bunch of other stuff.
But you want to do the reset network settings.
That'll clear out all the old settings on these iPads and then hopefully when you log onto your new Wi Fi network or you go to attached to it, connect to it, it will find it.
So try that, Brian, let me know, send me an email, let me know if that works or not.
Here's the deal.
My recommendation.
When you get a new Wi Fi router, you know your cable company says, hey, you got an old router, you gotta gotta upgrade to a new one.
Use the same network settings that you used on your old router.
That's the SSID, that's your Wi Fi network name, and then also the password.
And the reason why I tell you to do that is because when you turn on that new router, all your old gadgets will seamlessly connect to that new router, that new Wi Fi hotspot whatever you call it in your house.
So that is a little trick.
I made that mistake one time, and I've got so many smart gadgets in my house, all these smart devices that are connected, and I upgraded my router and I used a different SSID and a different password, and guess what, I had to go around the house for an hour and a half trying to reconnect everything.
So if you upgrade your WiFi, use the same Wi Fi network name and password exactly as it is on your old router and all your gadgets will seamlessly find the new router.
Good question, Brian eight to eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
The website for the show is rich on tech dot tv.
While you're there, be sure to sign up for my free newsletter.
This is show episode one fifty two.
All the show notes are right there.
We'll be back right after this.
Instagram this week is kind of peeling back the kind of the just letting you see your algorithm.
This is an interesting new feature that basically they say they're letting you choose the topics that you want to see more or less of.
I think this is very basic and water down, but if you want to see it, you can open up Instagram, tap the reels tab at the bottom, and then there's a menu icon on the upper right hand looks like two little hearts with lines, and that will bring up what they're calling your algorithm.
Speaker 5Now.
Speaker 1I think they have a lot more data on you than what they're revealing here, but it shows you a couple of topics that you've been into recently, and you can go in.
You can kind of tweak those, change them a little bit.
Let me see what mine is saying this morning.
My algorithm this morning is saying, let's see here.
It's taking a second to come up.
Lately, you've been into innovation in the tech world, parenting life, and Arizona's desert destinations.
Okay, whatever that means.
I mean I did go to Arizona a couple weeks ago.
And then you can add things you want to see more of.
So again, open up Instagram, tap reels at the bottom menu icon upper right, and you can see your algorithm.
You can review your topics, add or remove topics to customize your feed.
All right, big, big deal that's happening in play right now.
Netflix is trying to buy Warner Brothers, and then Paramount is kind of squeezing in there as well.
So here to talk about all of that and what it means for us is Peter Kafka, chief correspondent at Business Insider.
He is the guy you want to follow for all of this media information.
He knows it all.
Peter, thanks for joining me today.
Speaker 6Thanks for having me Rich.
Speaker 1So let's let's talk about this.
So what did you think when you saw this news?
Was it a surprise?
Speaker 6It was surprising that Netflix won this auction for Paramount, Sorry for Warner Brothers Discovery.
Lots of folks, including myself, assumed the Paramount who started the bidding really earlier this fall was going to end up winning Warner Brothers Discovery in large part because David Ellison, who runs Paramount, his father, Larry Ellison, is the second richest man in the world depending on what day you ask, So they've got essentially unlimited money.
Speaker 1Way, let me get that right.
Hold on the guy, the guy who runs Paramount, his dad is the guy who started Oracle correct.
Oh my gosh, wow.
Yes.
Speaker 6So you'll often see headlines saying David Ellison wants to do this, or David Ellison wants to do that.
It's really Larry Ellison, his dad, because his dad is bankrolling it.
In the same way that when I got out of college, I bought a car, I bought a Toyota tur Cell, but it was really.
Speaker 7My parents Toyota turtseell So.
Speaker 1That's what's going on there.
Speaker 6So, in addition to be very rich, Larry Elson is also a longtime Donald Trump's supporter, and David Elson, who was not really a Trump supporter but has really become one in the last year as he's tried to get this Paramount deal through, has been sort of nakedly sucking up to Donald Trump, contorting himself to please Donald Trump in the hopes that won he'd allowed him to buy a Paramount, and now that he allowed him to buy Warner Brothers Discovery.
So that's the longest.
The short answer is, yeah, I thought Paramount would get it, not Netflix.
Speaker 1So Netflix, Okay, So why does Netflix want this?
They've built this business from scratch, They've got, you know, incredible market share with their streaming.
Everything they've done I think I believe is uh, you know, it's kind of like the new way of doing things versus the old way, which is Warner Brothers.
Speaker 6So why do they want this studio?
Yeah, it's a good question.
It's unlike anything Netflix has ever done.
They never do big acquisitions.
Really, They've bought almost nothing to date, and their argument has always been why should we go buy a media company when we can create our own media company and take the money we'd use to buy an HBO or something like that and just put it into programming.
So we don't really know if they're thinking this is a once in a lifetime opportunity to own a giant movie studio and to own HBO, and it's just too good to pass up, or is it.
Hey, our growth is slowing and we have more competition, and we need something to help differentiate us.
It can be a little bit of both.
It's one of the ironies.
If you're old, you remember in twenty thirteen, when Netflix was just starting to do its own original programming, it did House of Cards, which is deliberately an HBO style show, and Ted Sarandos, who's now the CEO of Netflix, famously said, the goal is to become HBO faster.
Speaker 7Than HBO can become us.
Speaker 6And so for a long time, a lot of us thought that Netflix was trying to be HBO because that's what they said.
It turns out Netflix was just trying to become TV, and that's what they've done.
They've become sort of just everything that's on TV.
That said, I think they could probably still use HBO's higher end content to help differentiate themselves.
So I think on a simple level, that's what they're looking at, because.
Speaker 1They're gonna get a lot of back catalog of shows and movies and things like that.
Is there stuff they're not getting like I see on Warner Brothers, they've got like CNN, Discovery, Food Network, is all that part of this?
Speaker 6Or no, No, Warner Brothers only wants the movie Studio and HBO.
That's also what Comcast, who is also bidding, wanted.
It's also, frankly what anyone who was looking at at Warner Brothers Discovery wants.
We don't really think Paramount wants CNN and those cable channels.
The plan their pitch is to buy them.
Our thought, I'm just speaking is sort of the conventional wisdom is they they were just doing that because they thought it'd be a cleaner deal, just easier to buy all of Warner Brothers Discovery than to buy part of it.
That's no longer an issue, but for now they're saying we will buy the whole thing, including CNN.
That's also relevant because Donald Trump has said I think CNN should have new owners, which again suggests.
Speaker 7That maybe he will favor that Paramount bid.
Speaker 1So what about consumers and all this?
I mean, I am already paying thirty four dollars a month for Netflix.
Yes, I pay for my mom's Netflix.
So that's why I'm paying a little bit more than a lot of people.
But what does it mean?
I mean, and I'm also paying for HBO max.
Am I going to be a cheaper bundle here or are we expecting this to be more expensive come the future.
Speaker 6I have never seen prices come down for anything anywhere.
Ever, prices are always going to go up.
I think is there potential that there's a Netflix HBO bundle?
Speaker 1I think absolutely.
Speaker 6I think there's an offer at some point where Netflix says to its customer, like half or more of HBO customers have Netflix, but not all Netflix customers have HBO, and Netflix could say, hey, if you're already paying sh for Netflix, instead of paying fifteen or twenty bucks for HBO, we can sell it to you for.
Speaker 7Eight bucks or ten bucks.
Speaker 6Netflix hasn't come out and said that's what their plan is, but I wouldn't be surprised if they do that eventually.
Important thing is, even if this deal gets sort of finalized in the next few weeks, probably months, none of this is going to happen for at least twelve months, really closer to eighteen months, maybe even two years before any of this actually goes into effect.
Speaker 1What do you make of all the changes we've seen in streaming.
I mean, I get that this is a relatively young industry, and we've watched it kind of grow from the Rokus of the world and the Netflixes of the world to now you know, Apple TV Studios and Amazon owns owns MGM.
I mean, there's just so much going on with these tech companies.
What else is going to happen?
Speaker 6Do you think, Well, we assume there's going to be more consolidation every All of the big media companies that own what we would call basic cable stations are all trying to get rid of them.
Speaker 1Warner Bros.
Speaker 6Discovery is trying to get rid of CNN and Discovery and Food Network.
Speaker 1MTV is shutting down.
Is that true?
Speaker 6Don't that part confuses me?
I don't think it is shutting down.
It's it's a brand that is important to Paramount.
Still, they don't have many brands, but Comcast is handing over most of their cable channels.
They're turning that into a new company called versant A and E is dumping theirs.
So we're seeing the slow death of cable television.
That's not a surprise.
Most people listening to this probably don't pay for cable television.
Directly anymore.
But still people still do those businesses still exist, They're going away.
They are going to get replaced with streaming, and there is going to be more consolidation.
Speaker 1You will see more of this if sports was not part of the cable tv package, which right now they're still hanging on to that because a lot of the cable TV companies own the sports streaming or the sports channels, would be a much faster kind of downward spiral.
I think let's talk about this real quick before you go.
Disney open Ai.
Did you see that one coming?
I mean, this is like, these are two huge companies teaming up in this one billion dollar at least a billion dollar agreement where you'll now be able to use Disney characters to generate AI images and video.
Speaker 6It's a little interesting that open ai got that deal done just because open ai has been sort of like stumbling around when it comes to intellectual property and Hollywood.
They came out with this image video generation app earlier this year called Sora, which was just kind of a free for all kind of let you take your friends but also people who are actual celebrities and famous people and do mashups of videos with them.
And didn't really get permission for it.
They seem to be following the you know, ask for forgiveness not permission thing that most of the big tech guys do.
But you have thought that they would eventually make some deals.
Disney is more so because Disney is so protective of their intellectual property, and here they're saying to open AI yep, take two hundred of our famous brands, characters, et cetera, and let people do user generated content with them.
The upside for that is maybe they do cool stuff and people discover people.
This helps to expose Mickey Mouse to a whole bunch of new people.
The bad side is who knows what people are going to make with that user generated content.
Speaker 1They're supposed to.
Speaker 6Be guardrails against that, but if you've ever gone onto YouTube or Back of the Day in MySpace or TikTok, you know there's a real limit to how much policing you can do when the users are creating content.
Speaker 1So that's interesting, all right, Peter Kafka, We're going to leave it there, Chief correspondent at Business Insider, Go follow him, read his stuff if you're interested in media and technology.
Really great stuff, Peter, Thank you, so much for joining me today.
Speaker 7Thank you, rich Sie.
Speaker 1All right, coming up, we're going to take some more of your calls at Triple eight rich one on one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
Speaker 7God.
Speaker 1Email from Steve said, thanks a lot, rich I just ordered four Max speakers and fire TV.
It's all your fault, Hey, don't blame me.
I'm just a messenger back after this.
Lewis is in Riverside.
Lewis you're there, Yeah, I.
Speaker 5Am rich Okay, here's my question.
I have a Moto gene stylist five Gen twenty twenty two on the Metro PCs network subsidiary, you know, key Mobile.
Speaker 3Sure, and I don't.
Speaker 5Have the ability to schedule sending a text message?
Speaker 1Why not?
Speaker 5I do not know my friend, you know, different phone, different network.
I'm he can hit the little three buttons and it says, you know, in the up right hand corner, schedule sending.
Speaker 2A text message.
Speaker 5Sure, And I hit that little button and that option doesn't come up it.
I can add people on a text message, different stuff, but not that that's the thing I want?
And is there a way to add that?
Or is that not offered on this phone?
Or offered by metro PCs.
Speaker 1Well it should be offered.
So a couple of things to look at.
Number one, the messaging app that you're using.
Do you know what app you're using, or using Motorolas or using Google Messages.
Speaker 5I'm just using whatever came out phone it we have to be Motorolas.
Speaker 1Okay, so download this is this is actually a pretty easy fix.
You just have to download Google Messages.
And are you yeah, so Google Messages, you know you're talking.
Your phone is from twenty twenty two, so they probably, you know, Motorola might have had their own messaging app that they were using.
Almost all of the major providers have on Android have switched over to Google Messages because it supports what's called RCS.
So RCS is Rich Communication Services.
It basically allows Android users to text with iPhone users and each other in a much better way.
It's a much more modern texting protocol.
And so you can send through large photos, large videos, you can see typing indicators and all that stuff.
And part of that is the ability to schedule a message as well.
So I'm looking at Google Messages right here on my phone, and it's saying that if I want to schedule a message, I just dial a number, get into that sort of call area or that text area, and there's a plus sign lower left hand corner, a whole bunch of options, including attach a file, location, contacts, and one of them is schedule send, and I get the options for later today, later tonight, tomorrow, or I can pick a date in time.
So again to review Lewis Google Messages, look for it in the apps in the Google Play Store and you can download that.
All your text messages will follow over.
So if you have a whole bunch of texts already on your phone, they will all follow over to the new app and they'll just be there.
And then you should make sure that RCS is enabled on your device and is enabled on Google Messages.
You can go into settings.
It should automatically kind of activate, but it should be activated there in the settings, or you should be able to check if it's activated in the settings.
And then once you've got that, then you can use this feature.
Now, I know that on iPhone you can only use the scheduled messaging if you are texting another person on I Message, and so that's just a limitation that Apple is built into the phone.
I don't know why, but it's something that you can do with anyone that's using rcs on the Android side of things, which includes Android users and of course iPhone users as well, because when Apple does things, they only do it to favor the people that use iPhones, and when Google does stuff, they do to favor everyone.
They don't kind of pick and choose where things work, and that's what I really like about how they kind of approach things.
Apple's great, it's amazing.
They do great stuff, but ninety nine percent of it is favoring their other products.
Whereas Google and Android, a lot of people say, oh, why doesn't Android have this, Why doesn't Google have this?
Why don't you just build this in They have one hundred different vendors, all building their own phones, all making slight little tweaks on the software, all different hardware specs, and so it's not as easy for Google on Android to roll something out to everyone all at once like it is on Apple, where they control every single aspect of every single phone running iOS.
They know exactly how to tweak things for iOS because they're the only company, they're the only pump place that makes it.
So with Android it's a lot tougher because a much bigger open ecosystem, and that's why we don't always get everything on Android first day, you know, like some of these features that they roll out, it takes a while.
Like they just added air drop to the pixel or I guess their version of it.
It's compatible with air drop, and all these Samsung people of course want the same thing, but they can't get it first day because now Samsung has to go in and like check out one thousand phones that they make and figure out how to make this work with that.
So it's a lot.
New gadget this week.
Gadget of the Week is the Pebble Index oh one.
This turns your finger into a memory button.
It's a tiny ring that lets you capture ideas, reminders, and notes without pulling out your phone.
So it's a small smart ring.
It's got a physical button in a microphone.
You press the button, you say what you want, and it's sent to your phone and you can capture reminders, notes, calendar items, simple actions, no wake words.
It's not always listening.
It only records when the button is pressed.
It does work offline.
It is not needed an Internet connection.
Nothing's sent to the cloud, no paid subscription, battery lasts, about two years.
Works with iPhone and Android, and if your phone's not in nearby, it'll still store about five minutes of audio.
So it's a ring that makes your finger smart and remembers things.
I can't wait to get this thing.
I love taking voice memos.
It's seventy five dollars on pre order now.
The price will write to ninety nine dollars when it ships.
It's gonna ship March twenty twenty six.
And again, this is the guy who created the Pebble Watch.
He also created Beeper, remember that back in the day, not the Beeper, but Beeper app.
It was like a app that would bring all your messaging in line together.
They still have it, but the people who bought people who make WordPress, bought it from them anyway.
Pebble Index zero one.
I cannot wait to get that very very simple smart ring coming up.
Uh Android gets live video to nine one one calls.
Tell you about that and more of your calls.
Next.
Welcome back to rich on Tech Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you talking technology at triple eight rich one oh one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
The website for the show is richontech Dot TV.
If you're not following me on Instagram, I am at Rich on Tech.
Do you see the theme?
Speaker 5Yeah?
Speaker 1I think figured it out.
This week.
Android added live video to nine one one calls.
Now I say they did, but this is rolling out, and in Google's terms, when they say rolling out, I'm not kidding.
I just got access to Gemini on my home speakers and they're rolling it out for like months.
I saw that feature last year, so it takes them a while.
And again it goes back to what I was saying about all the different makes and models of these phones and Android software versions.
But they're doing this through Google Play Services, which very complicated.
But let me just explain the way an Android phone works.
There's sort of two levels of updates.
You've got the updates that the manufacturer makes on their software, that's the operating system, and then you've got something called Google Play Services, and those are the core updates that Google makes to Android itself.
Like basically, they could roll out little features and push them onto phones no matter who the maker of that phone is, you know, within reason.
So that's what they're doing here with emergency live video.
Role out allows you to share a live video feed with nine one one responders obviously designed to help in medical emergencies.
They can walk you through CPR.
If you're lost, you can show them where you are, you're under high stress, you're hiding like a hostage situation, you can, you know, maybe just show some video and they can help figure out where you are or what to do.
Responders must request the video.
You have to approve it.
It's all encrypted.
You can stop it at any time.
Apple got this feature last year on the iPhone.
They call it Apple's Emergency SOS Live Video.
So this is rolling out.
Keep in mind all the nine one one dispatch centers, they all have varying levels of ability because they all have different software, they all run different programs.
It's not nine on one is not a national thing here in the US, so it's individual jurisdictions that run nine one one, and so you have to just keep in mind this may not be available everywhere and you can't start it anyway.
They have to ask for it.
So if you get that, if you ever call nine one one, hopefully you don't have to, but if you ever get that, request live video, like wait, what is this now?
You know?
Email from Beverly Beverly says information on my Google calendar disappears after a few weeks.
I feel like I should go back to paper.
My event history is missing.
Is there a way to keep everything available?
Or is my past gone?
Beverly, no matter how many ghosts you have in your past, still never be gone.
Those skeletons in the closet are following you around everywhere.
Now I'm just kidding.
We're talking about your Google calendar.
Here.
Here's what happens.
I get this question.
No less than once a week someone says my calendar is gone.
No, it's not gone.
Go to If you're using Google Calendar, you can confirm I have every single calendar appointment from the beginning of time on my calendar.
You can go to calendar dot Google dot com from a desktop computer and just tap the search and search for something from whenever.
I mean, I just search birthday and I can go back to the beginning of time on my calendar whatever, whatever restaurant you go to, so it's there.
Google does not delete this stuff.
They do not delete your calendar entries.
Now, the app that you're using to access your calendar on your phone or your computer may not sink all of the calendar entries.
Why because it's a big project to sink ten years worth of calendar entries.
So typically they only sink a certain amount.
Now, if you go on the iPhone, if you're using the iPhone calendar, which Beverly maybe you are, go to settings Apps Calendar and you'll see where it says sink.
Speaker 4Now.
Speaker 1I have mindset to all events because I just like to roll that way.
But typically you can do two events or two weeks back, one month back, three months back, or six months back.
I mean, how many times have you had to look at an event more than six months back?
So I think, Beverly, you got to change those settings on your sink.
And then on Android, let's look at the Google Calendar app.
I've not looked at this, so I'm going into settings.
I'm guessing it's all there.
Let me see general, let's see is there a way to sink a certain amount?
Let's see here does not say, does not say?
Okay, so I don't think they have a sink amount on here because it's just Google.
I think they just pull it from the cloud.
Yeah, so you don't need to really sink on there.
It's just gonna automatically come up anyway, whatever app you're using, you may just have to sink more time.
Let's go to DEVN in Las Vegas.
Devin, you're on with Rich.
Speaker 8Hey, what's going on?
Speaker 9Rich?
Speaker 10Happy Saturday, my brother.
It's always a pleasure to listen to the show.
Yeah, thank you, Oh oh my pleasure.
Thank you man.
There's so many questions that I didn't know I had just by listening that you answered.
Speaker 3So thank you.
Speaker 1Oh that's good.
I thought you were going to say you have more questions after you listen, because that's a problem.
Speaker 9Rich.
Speaker 1I love what you talk about, but I don't understand any of it.
I'm like, well, I'm not doing my job right then, No, You're.
Speaker 10Doing an excellent job, man, And and that's why I'm tuned in every Saturday with.
Speaker 4You, brother.
Speaker 5Thank you.
Speaker 10My question here, of course, my question today.
So I have a project I'm trying to do, probably some maybe i'll say, sixty sixty five inch TVs.
I want to buy four of those and put them on the wall here and put two side by side and two on top.
Speaker 2Of each other.
Speaker 10And my question is if I do that as opposed to having all the TVs on at the same time and me watching the same game on four different to four different sets.
Is there a way, Well, I'm sure there's a way.
How can I make all of those?
Or is it possible in this case to make all one game in this situation instead of playing on all four TVs, just be playing as it's just the four making one.
Speaker 1Okay, you want to merge you want to merge the four TVs into what's you want to make a video wall?
Basically?
Speaker 5Yes, sir?
Speaker 1Okay, I mean have you done this before?
Have you tried this?
What's this for?
Is it for a bar like your house or what?
Speaker 10No, it's it's just for the house.
Speaker 1Oh wow, okay, well, I mean it can be done.
And I saw it's funny you say this because I sat and I was mesmerized by a YouTube video about this.
I watched the whole thing.
It was like thirty minutes the guy and there's there's so many of them.
So the best place to look for this is really YouTube.
They have so many of these people, these YouTubers, they you know, these DIY people.
They change their basement into a video wall because you know, you can use it for various reasons.
You can make you know, like you're saying you can watch content on it, but you can also make it look like an outdoor windows and things like that.
So there's a lot you can do with this.
The main thing is it takes a little bit to do this.
It's not straight forward.
It is not as simple as taking the output from your cable box and just splitting it four ways and it's all gonna work.
No, no, no, that would be way too easy.
You know, these TVs, it's you need number one, you need a video wall kind of controller and so it's an HDMI device that's uh, some of them, you know.
For you you're talking four TVs, so a two by two, right, and so you would get this little video controller.
You'd have to plug your HDMI into that, and then the four HDMI cables from there, the out you know, the outbound would go into the TVs, and then of course you'd have to mount the TVs on the wall.
You'd have to make sure you want ones that are really thin with thin bezels, because you know there's gonna be a black bar in between all four of them.
And then you may depending on how the TVs are mounted, some people mount these horizontally.
Some people mount them vertically to make like a window.
You know, you can do things like rotate the screen or the picture, so there's a lot you can do.
It's not necessarily a simple thing.
So if you want a good DIY project, it's fun and I think it'll work.
But at the end of the day, I've not done this personally, and I would also suggest before you embark on this, I would take a look at some of the projector screens and projectors that they have nowadays, because especially these short throw projectors they're called, they sit about a foot from the screen, like at the base of the screen, and they throw up a one hundred and eight inch picture or something or even bigger, so you can get significantly and the video quality is so much better than it was in the past.
So but I think this is a fun project.
If you want to do it, and you want to make this in Las Vegas, sounds like a fun thing to do.
Just know that you need to, you know, definitely need one of those video wall controllers.
I'm looking on Amazon.
They've got a two x two four K video wall processor with eleven spice splicing modes for one hundred and twenty bucks.
Then they've got another one for two hundred and sixty nine, same thing two by two, So you know, the price varies, and I think I would be I would go somewhere in the middle.
I'm looking at one for fifty nine dollars.
If you're going to buy four of these TVs you said at fifty five sixty five inches and put them on your wall and go through all that.
I would definitely spend a little bit more on this HDMI controller for sure.
And keep in mind, I would test all this stuff before you mount it, make sure it works, make sure you can get it to work.
That's a fun project.
I mean, I I've actually I love that you're doing this because I've always wanted to do one of those windows.
They it looks like an out window to the outside, but it's just really a TV.
You know, a lot of TV studios use them.
I just think that would look really cool in the House'd be fun.
If I ever have a home studio for the radio show, that'd be a fun thing to do.
Devin, thanks for the call, appreciate it.
Eighty eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
I saw one of these windows at CES and I'm trying to see.
Hold on, I'm looking at CS.
This is how I search for stuff that I've done in the past.
It just search like CS, Rich Tomuro virtual window.
Let's see if I can find it.
Uh here it is Liquidview.
That's what it was called.
Check out liquid View.
Such a cool thing and make virtual windows.
I'm looking at it.
It's exactly what you're talking about, except it's just like a Oh, it's so cool.
Digital windows for windowless rooms.
And what they do is they take it a step further.
They don't just sell you the actual screen.
They sell you the content as well.
So they've gone out around the world and they've recorded content for like twenty four hours in like four K or eight K, and so that the sun rises and sets it like it's synced with your wherever you live.
And that's called Liquidview thoughliquidview dot com.
I'll link it up on the website, all right, eighty eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
Remember anything I mentioned, It's all on the website.
Rich on tech dot tv.
If you got one of these Aura frames, my favorite digital Wi Fi frame, I'll tell you about the great new feature it just picked up rich on tech more show coming up next eight eight a rich one on one eight eight eight seven four two four one zero one got a message from Kim says that Lewis called back and said, Uh, your scheduling text recommendations worked like a champ.
Thank you so much and that's why he listens to you.
Thank you, Lewis.
I'm glad it worked out for you.
Let's go to Mark in uh Saint Petersburg.
By the way, Adam is in for Bobo today.
I was giving him the hand signal to give me a ding, you know that bell.
He said, he doesn't know what that signal meant.
Mark, welcome to the show.
What's up?
Oh?
Speaker 11Thank you rich Patsy Outlea, and I just wanted to ask you a question.
I have a iPhone and I was wanting to try to figure out the easiest way to clean out all duplicate files and stuff.
But every time you get on one, they after three days or seven days, they want you to make a subscription.
And I would like to see if there's like an affordable way or one that's more recommended than others or.
Speaker 7No.
Speaker 11I get all kind of pop up eds for the same type of services.
Speaker 1Yeah, they're all going to well, okay, so a couple things here.
Number one, great question mark.
Number one, there is no cleaner app for the iPhone that does what cleaner apps do on Android, or on Windows IT or even on the Mac.
It just doesn't work that way.
The way that iPhone the operating system is engineered is everything is sandboxed, which means apps cannot see data from other apps unless Apple specifically allows them to.
So there's not an app that can just sit there and access everything across your phone.
That's for security reasons and that's just by design.
So there's not really an app that says, okay, let's run this app and it finds all the gunk on your system, the duplicate files, all that stuff.
It can't do that.
There are apps that can do parts of that, and there's also some built in tools on the iPhone that can do that as well.
So let me show you a couple of these.
Number one, the app that I like to clean up the iPhone with duplicate photos and things like that is called Clever Cleaner c l e v Er Cleaner.
Now, if you type it into search on your iPhone, you may come up with a whole bunch of different random apps that are going to try to charge you.
This one has no ads and it does not charge you at all.
Ever, Just I'm gonna double check that because the last time I looked at it, that's the way it was.
So if I type in clever Cleaner, you got to be sure you're getting the right one too.
It's got forty two thousand reviews right now now, and it's called clever Cleaner AI cleanup app.
And I'm scrolling down the way I always kind of assess an app is you scroll all the way down to the information section.
And this is great advice for just any app that you're downloading.
Always scroll down on the app Store and look under information.
It tells you seller size, category, compatibility an app.
It also tells you if an app charges you.
So I'm looking at this other random cleanup app and I scroll down, and oh, what does this say in app purchases one week seven dollars ninety nine cents, one year twenty nine ninety nine.
Now, I'm not against paying for ads, especially or paying for apps, especially helpful ones, but you have to be aware of what you're getting into.
Ninety nine percent of the apps out there on the App Store.
They just want you to download their app, and then eventually you're gonna try it and you're gonna use it, and you're gonna say, oh, I'm running up against this wall.
I need to pay for this now.
So I always like to see what I'm what I'm getting myself into before I actually download an app.
So always when you download an app, before you download it, check all the way down under information and look for that in app purchases area.
Nobody looks at that, but it's the best thing about the App store is that it shows you that.
So anyway, Clever Cleaners is from cleverfiles dot com, So you can go to that website and that's gonna do all the cleanup you need for your photos.
And it's really good and it's completely free.
Like I said, now, when it comes to the rest of your iPhone storage, you can go to iPhone you can go to General set sorry getting ahead of myself, go to Settings, then tap General and then tap iPhone Storage and you'll see a whole bunch of things under recommendations.
And that's where you can review your photos and videos.
It'll show you large photos and videos recently deleted offload unused apps, review your downloaded media.
Messages in iCloud.
You can turn that on to save some space, you large attachments in your in your messages, optimize storage, you can enable that auto delete old conversations, review your TV downloads.
Oh, they've added a lot to this.
So that is really what you want to do is Apple will go through and help you with all that.
And again you go into Settings General and then iPhone Storage and then under your recommendations tap show wall and I'll give you all the different ways.
By the way, one of the best ways to clear up space on your phone two ways.
Number one, delete a large video.
Number two your podcasts.
A lot of times it downloads a whole bunch of podcasts just keeps them forever.
So if you going on a trip or something you need to free up some space, quickly check your podcast downloads.
But those are the ways to do it.
Mark Those are the ways to get your iPhone cleaned up again, not just one app that's going to just go through everything and help you do that.
Those are pretty much scams.
Eighty eight rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
I will link up clever cleaner on the website.
Just go to rich on Tech dot TV.
This is episode one two.
It's right on the home screen.
Or scroll down to radio show and you'll see the episodes.
Just tap one fifty two.
All the show notes are there.
All right, coming up, I'm still going to tell you about this Aura feature on the new Aura feature, and we'll get to more of your calls right here on rich on tech.
Okay, this Aura frame one of my favorite gifts of the holiday season.
If you have not gotten one of these, I'm telling you it's a crowd pleaser.
I saw it at Costco yesterday.
I was selling for like a hundred bucks.
It is such a great thing, and I've got one.
My family has one, my wife's family has one.
We love it.
But anyway, the neat thing about these frames is there's a lot of Wi Fi photo frames out there, but the neat thing about this one is that the software is really good, the design is really good, and you know, it's just simple.
You can you can email, or you can send a photo from your phone right to a family member or a friend's frame, you know, with a little bit of setup.
But now you've got a new feature where you can text to a frame, so friends and family can text photos directly to your Aura frame or vice versa.
So that means you don't have to download the app and you don't need an Aura account for the sender, so that means it's super super easy.
So if you have like a less tech savvy person in your family, you can just say, oh, yeah, here, if you want to send you know, you want to text me a picture to my frame, here you go.
So that's really really cool.
You can, as the frame owner, can approve the phone numbers.
So let's say you've got three people you want to be able to, you know, that can send photos to your frame.
You just approve their phone numbers in the app.
So this is really really cool.
You have to go into the Aura app as an owner and link your own phone number and then you can set it all up.
But it's a really really neat way to kind of it's already easy to add pictures to this frame, but now the ability just to text them in, I think adds another layer of awesomeness.
Let's see here, let's go to Stephen in Hawthorn.
Steven you're on with.
Speaker 2Rich, Yes, Rich, thank you, thanks for packing this pall Rich.
I just had a question about these AirPods Prove three version, okay, And the reason why I purchased those is because it has a language translation feature.
Sure, and I've discovered that it only works it apparently it only works with the Apple Intelligence.
Speaker 7Is that true?
Speaker 1Yes?
Speaker 5Why?
Speaker 2Okay?
The reason why because I have an old version of the iPhone iPhone eleven.
Speaker 1Oh yeah, you need you need you need an iPhone fifteen Pro or later exactly.
Speaker 2And it makes me think, is it the Apple Intelligence that's actually doing the translation rather than the AirPod Yeah.
Speaker 1Well, it's a little bit of both.
I mean they're using Look, I mean they need to there's got to be a driver for the you know, the translation.
I think Apple Intelligence is part of that.
I think that it's just part of what makes it work.
I don't know exactly how they're doing it, you know, but that's that's kind of the way that they position it on the website.
They say, look, if you want live translation, you've got to have the AirPods four with the noise cancelation AirPods Pro two or AirPods Pro three, iPhone fifteen Pro or later iOS twenty six or later.
Apple Intelligence turned on Apples, Translate app downloaded, and the latest AirPods firmware, So it requires a lot of things.
And I would say, Stephen, this kind of falls under what I was talking about earlier in the show where I didn't read the help page before I ordered all the speakers.
So it's like, oh, shoot, I need that.
Oh my gosh.
With that said, you know, there's also some limitations on the languages too.
There's only a handful of languages that are supported right now.
What language were you trying to translate?
Speaker 2Well, mostly Spanish, you know, okay, pa, you know.
Speaker 1I mean that's that's a relatively easy one.
There's a lot of you know, there's a lot of Spanish is usually like kind of like in the basics of all these translation apps.
I think they added Japanese.
The one that they demoed with me was I think it was Portuguese, which was kind of unique.
The other thing, there's some news this week too that I believe Google I think they actually made their translation and this puts a little pressure on Apple is I think they made their live translate available to any earbuds now.
Yeah, so look at this.
So Google expanded their real time speech translations to any headphones.
This used to be just a Pixel buds thing, so now it's rolling out in beta.
All you need is a compatible Android phone and Google's Translate app to use their live Translate feature, which was pretty amazing.
That's pretty impressive.
So hopefully Apple will follow suit and maybe they'll open this up to more stuff.
But it sounds like at this point you need to use that Apple intelligence.
Are you willing to update your phone or upgrade your phone for this feature or no?
Speaker 2Yeah, definitely up to upgrade apparently.
Speaker 1Okay, well, all right, sounds like it sounds like an upgrade might be in your future if you really want to use that translate Live Translate.
It's so funny.
I've got it on my I've got this on my docket of things to do.
I get so many calls and questions about this live Translate feature.
People love this feature.
I mean, it's amazing because it's going to just kind of continue to to, you know, make our world smaller.
But you've got it on a bunch of devices.
So you've got it on the pixel buds they were the first to have it.
Now you've got it on a couple models of air pods.
AirPods Pro three, AirPods Pro two, and the air POD's four, but the higher end, the ones that have active noise cancelation.
Now Google, oh, you also have it on the Meta ray band glasses, so you've got it there.
There's a device called time Kettle, which I'm still waiting for them to send me a sample so I can try that.
That's a standalone device, and they also make earbuds, and then you've got now Google expanding it to any earbuds if you have an Android phone.
That's amazing the fact that you can do real time speech translation.
And don't forget you also have all of the ais that can do this too.
So you've got Gemini, You've got CHATCHYBT.
You flip those into the live voice and they can translate anything too.
I mean, traveling the world and interacting with people that speak a different language has gotten so much easier.
It's it's quite incredible.
All right, I think we got our guest here.
Let's see.
I think Nicholas Merrill is on the line.
Nick, are you there, I'm here, Okay, Welcome to the show.
Nick Nick is founder of a new privacy first carrier called Freely p h R.
E E L.
I.
So the big deal about this carrier is that it's a privacy first and you only sign up with your ZIP code.
So it's really nick, why did you come up with this?
Speaker 12Well, first of all, thank you for having me on the show.
Speaker 13I've been working in the privacy space for a few decades now, and basically, I feel like the telecom industry, it collects a lot of information about us, and that sort of leads to a degradation in our privacy, and I feel like it's sort of reached a point where people are upset about it and they want a better option that doesn't hand over all their info to all kinds of third parties.
So I've been doing research and development on free software for a bunch of years and how to make privacy easier.
But I understood that to most people, it's still feels like a lot of work, and it feels like you need to have a lot of sort of esoteric knowledge.
And we're trying to do is build it into the service provider, into the mobile provider, so that all you really have to do is switch to this company and you get a big privacy game just by doing that.
Speaker 12So the idea is like, if you can only do one thing to.
Speaker 13To sort of advance your mission to get yourself better privacy today, switch to freely.
Speaker 1So why would I want that?
Why do I want more privacy with my cell phone?
Like I you know, let's say I'm with one of the big carriers.
Why do i want more privacy from my cell phone carrier.
Speaker 13I mean, from what I'm understanding, most people really do.
Private carriers are essentially selling customer data.
Speaker 7To data brokers.
Speaker 13And sometimes it's freeze in advertising, but sometimes it's not.
Sometimes it ends up in the hands of all kinds of scammers, people that do identity theF Like, once the information is out.
Speaker 12There, it's sort of beyond your control.
Speaker 13When you sign up for typical phone company account, you know, you end up having to really give them a lot of info, right if they if they run your credit you may have to give a driver's license number, a social security number, You give them your home address, You may give them you know, those.
Speaker 12Extra security questions like your mother's maiden name.
Speaker 13Now, when this information ends up getting hacked from the phone company or getting stolen, your information is out there and like I've experienced it in the past where I was using a mainstream phone company and they got hacked, and then they said, oh, hey, we'll pay for a credit monitoring service for you for six months.
But in the end, it's sort of like, why do you want to put your information out there when you don't have to?
Speaker 1So you've got all these different plans, you know, ranging from twenty five to eighty five dollars a month.
What about I mean, you're running on a main carrier.
I'm guessing.
Can you say which carrier you're on?
Speaker 13Yeah, yeah, we're on T mobiles network.
Speaker 1Okay, so you're on T Mobiles network.
I mean they were okay with you saying, hey, we're not going to collect any data from our customers.
We're just going to ask for a ZIP code to sign up.
I mean, why doesn't just T Mobile do that?
Then it would be nice.
Speaker 13If they would.
I wish they would.
I really do think, like I say, I'm so old.
I remember when you could walk up to a payphone and drop a din in and make a phone call without having.
Speaker 7To show ID.
Speaker 13I really think that the right to communicate should universal and you shouldn't have to.
Speaker 12Hand over all of.
Speaker 13Your most personal info to a company in order to just communicate.
It's a it's a thing that we can't really almost get away without these days having a cell phone.
So no, I really wish all the cell phone companies would would collect less info.
Speaker 1Is there a security risk here?
I mean the government?
I mean, I'm sure you know what about the security aspect of things, like people have been, you know, buying burner phones for a long time.
Sure is this similar to that?
I mean, you're not positioning this says hey, do bad things.
You're just saying, protect our privacy, But I mean, can't Is there an opportunity for people to use this for nefarious reasons or is that just everything tech?
Speaker 13We're saying the exact opposite of that, do not do anything wrong on our phone company.
We do not want that.
We don't support that.
You know, we're not We're not against law enforcement's mission.
We want law enforcement to catch the bad guys who are doing bad stuff.
Speaker 12However, we don't think that all.
Speaker 13Of the rest of us, who are not bad guys should have to give up our privacy in order to uh, in order to try to deceaver and like, as you noted, the option to use a burner phone already existed, So.
Speaker 12What we're doing.
Speaker 13Doesn't really get someone more privacy than having a burner phone.
Speaker 12But what it does is it makes it convenient.
Speaker 13You know, you could be on auto pay, you have all the convenience of using like a regular phone company, but with more privacy.
So I think the thing is if you want to do the whole go to a gas station and buy a sin thing and then.
Speaker 12Top it up in cash.
That's that's a lot of work.
Speaker 13And that's inconvenient and it's not fun.
But you know, if criminals want to do that, then that's.
Speaker 1What they're going to do.
Speaker 13And you know, honestly, if someone's doing something wrong, as I said, I hope law enforcement conches for them.
But what we're out to try to protect the privacy rights of the ninety nine point nine percent of people who aren't bad guys.
Speaker 1What about when I put in my credit card?
Isn't that now I've you know, we've done a lot of stories on data and data collection, and as I understand it, there's layers of data that these marketing companies and brokers just sort of layer together.
So if they only have my zip code, now they narrow it down to like other things that they'll figure out and kind of match up about me.
So once they have my credit card, it's like, okay, well now you've got your credit card and your zip code.
Now we know who this person is.
So is that possibility here?
Speaker 7Oh yeah, I mean, like one.
Speaker 12I want to make clear we have not solved the problem of privacy.
Speaker 13There's still there's still many aspects of it that remain to be worked on.
So part of the issue is, like I mentioned, for getting privacy really really right, it's hard.
Speaker 12It takes a lot of work.
Speaker 13And if I don't know, if you remember those books from childhood, they were called Choose your Own Adventure.
Speaker 1Of course you know they have there's.
Speaker 12Like decision trees, right, Hey, do you want to go down this path or that path?
Do you want to go behind this door or that door.
Speaker 13We offer people the option to pay for their phone service with cryptocurrency if they want, including some of the more private cryptocurrencies like z cash and Monero.
Speaker 12Now, if you do that, that information doesn't go into the credit bureaus, that doesn't go to the data brokers.
Speaker 13So we're offering the option to have different levels of privacy depending on how much work our customers are interested, willing and interested to put into the effort.
We understand that most people are going to use their regular credit card with their name on it from their bank because that's what's easy.
And we we we want to give super private options, but we also want to meet regular people where they are today, and then you know, there's always the option to sort of increase your privacy, you know, security as you as you go down the path.
Speaker 1Well, it's certainly a hot topic and something that I think is on top of mind for so many people.
I hear.
I get privacy emails all the time from people asking questions about how they can better protect their privacy.
Nick Merrill, thank you for joining me today with the carrier Freely p h R E E l I dot com freely cool name cool.
Spin on that and I'll put the link on the website.
Nick, thanks for joining me today.
Speaker 12Thank you so much for your time.
Rach I appreciate it.
Speaker 1All right, looking forward to testing that out.
I'm got I gotta get a test see how that works.
I'm curious.
All right, eighty eight rich one on one.
The lines are packed.
We will get to some of your some more of your calls after this.
Plus what can I tell you.
Oh, I found a uh an Apple Watch AI app that you know, you can put little AI on your Apple Watch so you can ask it questions.
I'll tell you about that coming up right here.
I'm rich on tech Joy in San Diego.
Welcome to the show.
Speaker 9Hi, rich Am I supposed to be on speaker?
Speaker 7Is it okay?
Speaker 1I can hear you?
Fine, so it's uh, I'll take it.
What's up?
Speaker 9Okay?
Well, I'm almost embarrassed to ask because I've gotten an iPhone fifteen, iPhone, I Pad, I'm AC and I Mac is still in the box because I'm so h not picking up even on my iPhone, very very very basic.
And I'm used to being older having a textbook that I can go back to.
I know I can go to Apple support, and someone told me I can simultaneously set up the iPad and the iPhone to try to learn things.
But all of this is like so far above my learning capacity right now.
And I was wondering if you had a suggestion for a textbook.
Speaker 1Yeah, well, it's funny.
I wrote one of these couple of years ago.
It's not updated anymore, but I did write an iPhone because I saw how many questions I was getting about iPhones, and so I wrote a book called one hundred and one Handy Tech Tips for the iPhone.
And I'm not kidding.
It was incredible.
I mean people were buying it like crazy because it was just the basics, I mean, so simple.
I started.
The first page was like how to take a screenshot, and it's just like little things like that, like how to turn your phone on, how to turn it off.
And people loved it because it was just simple.
It didn't assume that you knew anything.
What phone did you switch from?
Speaker 9I still have my landline?
Speaker 1Okay, so you switch from landline?
Okay.
Speaker 9Problem is I for the past twenty thirty whatever year since I've been retired, I got out of working when all the technology started to take hold, and I've never had incremental periods of time to learn these little things that sort of multiply and exactly what you said.
I'm going to look up that book because I don't know what an icon is, what a widget is, or what a green shot is that you just mentioned.
Speaker 1Okay, so you're really learning, Yeah, you're going for the basics.
Well, I understand, and I totally you know, you grew up in a different time and these are all kind of new to you, and it's once you figure it out, it's going to be great, and you're going to get the hang of it.
And believe me, everyone does eventually.
So oh, what I would say is you already know about the Apple website.
So Apple does have an official Apple Support phone guide, so you can go there iPhone user Guide and again, yeah, like your friend said, put that on your iPad and then you can follow along on your iPhone.
That's number one.
But I would probably buy a book, a couple of books.
There's and I don't want to I'm not gonna insult you here.
I'm not gonna but there's an iPhone for seniors for dummies.
I'd probably recommend something like that because it's paperback, you can doubt you can physically hold it and flip through it and have your phone in your other hand, and you can go through it and learn all the features.
And I think that's probably going to be one of the best ways to learn this.
And they've been making those those books for a long time.
The other thing, David Pogue used to make something called the Missing Manual.
I don't think that's there anymore.
I don't think they've updated it.
It looks like the last time they updated it was a couple of years ago.
But I think the the I hate to even use the term, but the Dummies book, I think is going to be the best way to learn joy And I'm here for you.
Sign up for my newsletter.
I'll give you the tips, the tricks, and I'm always here on email as well.
Thanks for the call today, Good luck with that.
Eighty eight rich one on one eighty eight seven four to two four one zero one.
Welcome back to Rich on Tech.
Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you, talking technology.
Eight eight eight rich one on one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
Get a lot of feedback about the Amazon Echo speakers and set up a lot of questions about that.
Clearly I was not the only one that didn't realize that you can connect those and make a home theater system.
Let's see so many emails.
Speaker 4Uh.
Speaker 1Also, I want to just tell you about my newsletter real quick, rich on tech dot TV.
If you're not signed up for the newsletter, you are doing yourself a disservice.
And I'll tell you why.
It's because everything that I mentioned on a weekly basis all the most important stuff that comes through my desk.
I put in this newsletter.
It's stuff that, like this show, I think you should know about.
So I put it all in there, I write it up, I sit there and I send it out to you, and it's free and people, you know, it's become like this community.
Now, this episode, this issue is my favorite.
I'll just tell you some of the things.
So I talked about the ECHO stuff.
I talked about how I built my own personal AI wine recommendation AI system with chat GIBT.
Basically, I took a picture, uploaded a picture or whatever of all the different wine that I like over the years, and I told it, here's what I like.
And then now if I'm at a restaurant and I see a menu, I can literally just upload that menu to my chat GBT project and it will give me the best wine glass to purchase based on all of my tastes.
And what's smart about that is that number one.
I don't know, if you've noticed prices of things over the years, they've gone up.
And so if you're like, hey, I want to spend this much on a glass of wine, give me the best bang for my buck that'll fit my taste.
That's number one.
Number two, you get a wine list, you have no idea what's on.
There could be Italian wines, French wines, Spanish wines, whatever.
You can feed that in and we'll still say, okay, here's the wines we've identified that you will like based on what you like.
So that was fun.
I spent like an hour doing that, and you could easily do it.
So I talk about how to do that my newsletter.
I got the tech Tidbits.
Oh, I also mentioned this.
I'll tell you about this app.
But anyway, the tech Tidbits, and then people share their emails.
There's so much in there.
Just go to Rich on tech dot TV, pop in your email address and you'll get this every weekend.
And then I'm doing a secondary one that's just like Q and A.
So all the emails I get, I picked like maybe ten each week to feature in the the other newsletter.
It's like a Q and A.
And by the way, a picture of Bobo's in here.
Bobo's not here today, but there's a picture of them.
Let's see.
Alex requested a picture of Bobo, so I put them in there.
But I told you about this app.
It's called Chirp c Hirp Chirp, and it's an Apple Watch app that adds like a voice assistant chirp dot Watch.
And there's no there's no proper AI assistant on the Apple Watch right now.
Don't tell me Siri is because that's not true.
So if there's no like Google Gemini, there's no chatgybt as far as I know.
But this kind of emulates that.
So it's a little tiny app.
You put it as a complication on your screen.
You tap it and then it gives you an answer.
So I can say something like, let me try it in lifetime.
So I did that.
I tapped it, and now I just tap press and hold and let's see what is the best movie coming out next weekend?
Now it's sending the info to Google Search.
It uses Gemini.
See if you can do this.
I have no signal in here.
Oh that's great.
There we go nothing no nothing.
What's the best movie at the box office right now?
SquarePants are some of the bigger ones.
Is also David and so Five Nights at Freddy's two is currently the top earner at the box office, and Zotopia two is also doing pretty well.
Okay, so there you go.
You can choose your little voice.
I didn't even know those movies were out.
Wow.
Okay, five days of Freday's too.
I never even saw the first anyway.
It's called Chirp dot Watch.
Check it out.
They also make, interestingly enough, a tiny little web browser for your Apple Watch screen.
I know crazy, I'll link it up on the website.
Rich on tech dot TV.
All right, let's go to Brad in Los Angeles, line five.
Wow, we have so many calls.
We're using all the lines, Brad, you're own with Rich.
Speaker 8I'm currently I'm currently on an iPhone eight with Verizon, and I want to keep the home button.
And I've been researching and it looks like the iPhone se third generation might be my only hope at this point because I've aged out on a few apps already that want iOS seventeen, which is my eight won't get.
Speaker 4So what do you think?
Speaker 1Uh?
Yeah, so I'm looking at the list you want.
You still want the home button?
Okay, so the eight and the eight plus for the last kind of mainstream iPhones to get that.
Then you've got, like you said, the iPhone sees all three read them, have it.
The iPhone SC three was last made in twenty twenty two.
Hold on, I'm checking this on the website and then it looks like I got to go to iOS twenty six and just see if that's still supported.
So at the bottom of the iOS website they have all the supported models.
Let's see if the se three is still supported, s oh ow SC two and later.
So yes, you're in luck, Brad.
That's your best bet because you can still run the modern operating system, the latest version of iOS on there, and so you'll still have access to all your apps and it'll work pretty well.
Have you heard of backmarket dot Com?
No, okay, it's a good place to buy it.
They are a well reputable, refurbished sort of you know, gadget place, and they sell all kinds of stuff, not just iPhones but everything.
iPhone SC from twenty twenty two unlocked will run you one hundred and thirty eight dollars.
How does that sound?
Speaker 8But listen, what's your astimate on how long the that third generation will last?
Because I know then Weimo is the one that I've been out.
It needs the seventeen and I think it was LA three eleven one is seventeen as well.
iOS seventeen.
Those they only two so far that I've noticed.
Speaker 1Okay, well with this one, you'll you'll have iOS twenty six, which is great, and iOS twenty six, I will tell you, will last for at least, let's see, at least two more years if you'll have support.
So and the reason I'm telling you that is because you've got the iPhone se second generation and later right now for iOS twenty six next year, what Apple usually does is they drop support for the last model.
So now iOS twenty seven will just support the iPhone SE three, and then when iOS twenty eight comes out, they'll drop support for that iPhone SE three.
So I think you have a good solid two years of software support.
So you got to do the math.
One hundred and thirty eight dollars for two years is that worth it it versus just buying a new iPhone that's going to give you another six years of use out of it.
So do the math.
But that's that's my thought.
Speaker 8What's that website back market?
Speaker 1Backmarket dot com?
Yeah, check it out, and you know it's a reputable place you can buy it.
It's got oh that's for fair condition.
So if you want excellent is one hundred and fifty four dollars.
But they inspect everything, they refurbish it, they make it really nice.
It's a good place to buy.
People really like it.
So why you're not ready to give up the home button?
Speaker 8Huh No, I tried it.
Too frustrating for it.
Speaker 1Okay, you'll get used to it.
I know you will, but I know it's it's tough to uh.
I know it's tough sometimes because we get used to things.
We like things a certain way.
And yes, I totally understand that.
Let's go to Tom in Tustin.
Where's Tom?
You would think it'd be easy to choose the line.
That's the only thing I have to do is tap the number of the line.
It is not easy.
It's like there's so many things blinking and this and that.
Tom, you're on with Rich?
Speaker 3Hey, Rich, First of all, thanks for everything you do for all of us tech dumbings out there.
Speaker 1Oh well, don't call yourself that, but yes, I you know, I just try to help.
So you know, I understand.
This is my world.
You've got your world, I've got mine.
Speaker 3This is not really a tech problem.
It's an odinity.
I ran into for Amazon last night.
I wanted to order a.
Speaker 6A Gillette.
Speaker 4Razor.
Speaker 3Okay, it's a Styler three and one.
It's about close to thirty bucks.
Speaker 1Okay.
I was gonna say, do you have to mortgage your house to do that?
Did you have to?
I was gonna say, do you have to mortgage your house to buy this razor?
Because they're very expensive.
Speaker 3Much but it's well, it's electric and yeah, anyhow, sure.
So I you know, normally, for fast delivery on Amazon, and I am an Amazon member, you have to meet a twenty five dollar minimum.
Speaker 4So when I.
Speaker 3Placed the order, it shifted me over to Amazon Fresh and then you have to meet a fifty dollars minimum in order to get the rapid delivery, right, So I just thought, you know, it was kind of irritating when I ran into that.
Have you ever heard of that before?
Speaker 1Yes?
And the reason why is because the razor was sold by Amazon Fresh and not Amazon.
So it's a little confusing.
And this is actually, I think, getting way better.
But so the thing was basically whatever specific razor you wanted, it was sold by Amazon Fresh and not Amazon.
It's very confusing of the same company, but for certain products they parse it out and they say, okay, this company and this happened to me the other day.
I wanted to buy this product and it was only sold by Amazon Fresh, and I had to do a huge order just to get it, and so I ended up not getting it.
But again that's kind of what happens.
Oh, by the way, I'm looking at this because I looked up Gillette.
This is so cool.
They have Gillette razors for all the NFL teams.
How cool is that?
What a good gift.
I got to get my kid one of these.
That is awesome.
Wow, look at this they've got.
Yeah, I'm looking at the forty nine ers right here, but they've got Gelette Labs Special, NFL, all these different editions.
That is so super cool.
Anyway, So the thing is when you're looking at Amazon, if you don't want that to happen in the future, you've got to use the the kind of selectors on the side, so it'll say like prime delivery overnight by eight am, eleven am, and you got to make sometimes it sells, it says the seller, and you can choose Amazon.
See right now, I can see there's a there's a check for Amazon Fresh.
So if I check Amazon Fresh, I'm only going to see stuff that I can get from that store versus Amazon.
So that is what happened to you.
The different the thing that Amazon is doing that they've been changing now is they're actually in co operating fresh food into standard Amazon deliveries.
So for instance, I got a delivery last night, and my delivery just came in a bag because it's not being shipped from anywhere.
They're just going into a warehouse that's nearby and they're just pulling the two items and they're bringing them to me.
So it's kind of like almost like an Amazon's version of door Dash, and we're going to see a lot more of that because Amazon is now mixing in fresh items, like we're talking milk and fresh food into your traditional Amazon orders, and they can't do that by shipping.
They're not going to put that on a truck to ship to you in a box that takes you know, overnight or two days.
They're just taking it from a smaller warehouse that brings it right to you, kind of cutting out the middleman of any sort of like delivery time.
So anyway, it's a really interesting concept, but I think we'll see less of this, hopefully, But I get it, Tom.
It's frustrating when that happens, for sure.
All right, eighty to eight rich one on one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one.
We got more calls.
We got to talk about this social media band over in Australia.
Kids over there must be losing their minds.
No more social media for them.
Probably a good thing for the world.
Australia probably become the smartest country.
Now, all right, more rich On Sack coming your way.
Right after this, Let's go to Frank in Apple Lake, New York.
Frank around with Rich Hi.
Speaker 4Rich got a question for you.
I'm a senior and I happen to have a lot of art writers in my fingers, which means that when I'm you know, typing on the computer, it's oftentimes the big problem for me, is there?
So here's my question in this AI age, does anybody manufacture a Star Trek voice activated computer where I could just say computer, go to E they or computer print what's on my screen?
Something like that.
Speaker 1Yeah, I mean that there is something built into Windows that is really good.
Let's see voice Access Windows eleven, so that it's it's I believe this is brand new and this lets you control your entire PC with voice and I just set it up on my Windows computer here, and I'm telling you, Frank, it's very impressive.
Like I'm talking, I'm looking.
It's it's going through like the practice like screens.
And so here's what I said.
I said, voice access wake up.
That'll turn on your microphone number one.
Then you can say, uh, click animal friend and it will select the box on the screen that says dog or cat, and then you can do that and then it says click cat and it'll click the cat show numbers.
I mean, it's it's basically everything you're talking about.
This is what you want now.
You said you have you have some decksterity like you can and you can turn on the computer and turn it off and like if you needed to, like peck a key, you could, right, Yeah, okay, so this is mostly just for everything in between.
So I think this would be a very good thing for you to try.
Do you have a Windows computer and.
Speaker 4It's Windows, Well my computer is broken right now, but I'm about to get a new one.
Speaker 1Well I would get a Windows eleven then for sure, because yeah, I mean, I'm telling you and I think this is a pretty new feature.
It's because I remember them announcing it and it's yeah, it's it's in the new version of Windows, like the latest update.
I'm gonna link this up on the website because this is incredible what they've done.
And it's just basically, I mean, I'm telling all the things that you can do here.
I mean, there's just so much you can do.
I mean, it looks like you can go right to websites, you can surf websites.
I mean, it's I think that the main thing is what you're talking about with Star Trek is natural language commands, and I think that these are not necessarily natural language just yet.
But it does give you a full voice access guide which you can just like print out.
But I think what's going to happen is there is a web browser called chat gbt at list and chat gbt And have you used any of the AI yet at all?
Okay, Well, the AI, what you're talking about AI is already there.
So the idea of just telling a computer what you want to do and what like, we're already there with chat GBT.
So i'd recommend what kind of phone do you have a smartphone or no?
Yeah, okay, download the chat GBT app to your phone.
Make sure you get the official one.
And there's a special there's a special let me see where it is on here.
Go to chat GBT and there's a special mode called voice.
And I'm not kidding.
You will not believe how much you can do with just that voice.
You can just talk back and forth, you can do calculations, you can ask things, you can ask it to search a website, bringing you back information, brainstorm.
It is quite incredible, and it's all natural language.
And by the way, it's I believe it's free.
I think anyone could access that for free.
But I think whereas a computer, we're not there.
I don't think just yet with the computer.
But this thing on Windows I think is the closest you're going to get.
And since you're telling me you have, you know, it's more of a convenience thing where you don't want to sit there and type everything.
You want to be able to call out commands.
I think this is gonna be really a good combination for you.
Now, the other thing we have, there's a program called whisper Flow, and this will also change your life, Frank.
It's basically a voice dictation app.
So when you're sitting there trying to do your emails and things like that.
You can use this whisper Flow and it is going to convert what you say into text in probably the best way you've ever seen in your life.
Like you're not going to believe how good it is.
And it does that with the help of AI on the beat back end.
But I basically do not type out my my anything on my computer anymore, including my newsletter, my emails.
I do all voice to text because it's gotten so good.
So again, just to review Windows Voice Access.
It's called whisper Flow and chat EBT.
Download that toolkit and Frank, I think it's it's really going to improve things for you.
And that justn't doesn't just go for Frank, that's for anyone you know you're struggling with, you know you want to We've got We're almost there.
We're almost to the point where you can control an entire computer with just your voice and in a really good way.
Rich on tech dot TV.
Coming up, we'll talk to uh, let's see Roberto.
We're going to talk to him about the car world, transportation, what's going on there with Rivian and others.
Coming up right here, I'm Rich on Tech Roberto Baldwin is a mobility journalist with sae ME Media Group.
We met in New York City at a GM event.
We talked the entire Uber ride to the airport.
I figured, you know what, I got to bring this guy in the show because he knows his stuff about cars.
Welcome to the show, Roberto, thanks for having me on.
Super excited, absolutely so.
It took me forever to get you on this show because you travel so much.
What are you doing all the time?
Speaker 7I travel pretty often, mostly with automakers.
I went to Poland to learn about their supply chain.
I went to the Alps Austrian and then I went to Germany to learn about the new the Mercedes Benz CLA.
I went to Toyota to talk to them about their proving.
It's yeah, it's anything automotive.
It's a lot, it's a very it's varied.
It's not just me going and driving cars, which is a lot of it.
There's a lot of like really sort of deep in the weath of the automotive industry.
Speaker 1You've been covering this stuff for a long time, right.
Speaker 7Oh yeah, for well over a decade before that, I was a tech journalist.
But before all that, I was a kid in the driveway every Saturday morning with my dad being told to go get a ratchet or a wrench, or, in the worst case scenario, I hammer.
Speaker 1Oh wow, So I assume you know how to drive stick I do.
Speaker 7I own a manual super vr Z.
Speaker 1Oh wow.
Okay, I never learned.
And my dad also like to restore cars too.
But when he asked me for any sort of like help, like hey, can you hold this oil pan or something, I'm just like, no, I got to go do something.
Speaker 11See.
Speaker 7I tried that, but that wasn't really an option.
Unfortunately.
It was.
The hilarious part is I was just as uninterested it seems as you were doing it.
But then as I got older, I found that when I'm working on a car, I'm very calm.
I'm very relaxed.
It's such a departure from our very digital world just to sit there with a ratchet or a wrench or a host clamp or whatever and sort of fix some vehicle.
Speaker 1Oh one hundred percent.
Don't get me wrong.
I on my street there's a car that's like an old Mustang or something that's just sitting in a driveway for like ten years now, And every time we walk past that.
I tell my kids, I go, do you think you could see me as like the dad who like restores this car?
They're like no, but I but I have the urge to do it, even though I have no idea what I'm doing.
All right, let's talk.
Let's talk.
Speaker 7You learned by doing yes, and.
Speaker 1Now with the Internet, of course, there's so many ways of learning.
So let's talk about Rivian.
They had their they had their big autonomy day this week, so give me an update on what they announced, Like, was there anything that stood out to you about Rivian?
And is this company like in a good place or should we be worried?
Speaker 7I think they are in a good place.
I think part of that has to do with Volkswagen had issues with their software a couple of years ago.
They're in car software, the ID four when it launched ID three in Europe, when it launched both of those, the software is very buggy, very laggy, and it really hurt initial sales for those vehicles and maybe long term sales.
Rivian, on the other hand, they're in car software which really well.
So Volkswagon has given billions of dollars to Rivian in order to help them with their software as a partner, and so Ribbon's able to use that money to a you know, produce vehicles.
B are the R you know, the R ones.
So we're talking about the R two, which is their sort of mid size suv.
That's the next item coming up from their lineup.
But they're also looking at enhancing their sort of future of self driving vehicles.
Their their level their level three vehicles.
Level three is is hands off and eyes off, so you could be reading a book, you could be reading a newspaper.
A lot of automakers are working towards this right now in the United States, only encountering Nevada.
Does Mercedes Benz have something like this, But on the way they're working on, you know, beginning next year with the updated R ones, you should be able to hands off but eyes on.
You're still in charge of everything that happens.
Use that system on any road, any road with painted lines, so you could do it on a dirt road, but on a you know, like a country road, on a back road, potentially in town.
It is sort of a big leap.
If you know anything about Blue Crewise or Super Crews, those both of those systems typically require you to be geo fenced onto a highway or a freeway.
This goes beyond that.
That said, it's still a very difficult proposition.
It's still very difficult for vehicles to understand the road contextually the same way that a human does.
And you still all in charge.
So when you come to a stop sign, when you come to a stoplight, when you come to intersection, you still have to take over and do you know, you have to drive while as if you're just on a long straightaway, the vehicle for the most part should be able to stay in its lane without you having to take over control of the storiate.
Speaker 1Well, how does what Rivin announce compared to what Tesla's already doing.
Speaker 7So with Rivian's announcing and Tesla's actually already doing this as well, is they had their they're building their own silicon, which is really actually quite difficult.
And when you think about your iPhones, all the chips inside of there, they're making millions and millions of those phones.
You have the economics of scale, and the economics that scale comes with the ability to find, you know, problems like weird edgu cases.
For automakers, you're not making millions and millions of vehicles.
If you're lucky you're selling a million, most likely you're selling a couple hundred thousand a year, So they're going to have that issue.
But one of the really interesting parts, and actually probably what everyone should be doing, is they're adding LEDR to their vehicles.
When they're talking about a sort of hands off, eyes off vehicles, so that that means they have the redundancy of light ar, radar and cameras watching the road.
It's that sort of full suite that allows if something goes, if one sensor can't figure out what's going on in the world, the other two can pick up the select.
Speaker 1This is a really big debate.
I mean it's really only a debate with Tesla because you know, Elon Musk and Tesla they continuously say like, we don't need this, we're not building this in but every car maker that I've seen is pretty much using it.
And I'll be honest as someone who has a Tesla, like in the fog, I don't trust self driving because it can't see anything that I can't see.
And so with light R you can you can see like two four football fields ahead with these you know this laser I get.
I don't know what is it laser vision?
Speaker 7It's it's so radar is you know, it's it's radio waves.
They bounce off something, it sends this, It sends information back and the vehicle or whatever you're using, processes of that information and tells you, oh, this is so far away and it's so big.
With light R it's using light.
So it's lasers, that's what.
Speaker 9It was.
Speaker 1Later Okay, I'm just saying that sounds weird, but okay, yeah, and so it can it can see things more.
And I feel like that, I mean, that seems to be the way to go.
I mean, Tesla's doing a good job, but like I feel like for overall, it's like all these companies are doing they're all doing light R now and they're really pushing to use that.
Speaker 7Yeah, and I think, you know, one of the issues I think Tesla early on, you know, especially with the Model three and everything, cost their concerns are really cost base.
They wouldn't say it.
You know, there's no dash cam in or I'm sorry, not a dash can dash cluster in the Model three and Model why, And they'll tell us all day it's a design issue.
Really, it's about costs.
That's a that's an additional screen, that's an additional wine hardness, that's additional software and development you have to do.
So Tesla has always been very cost conscious and light are you know, when especially when it first came ten thousand dollars per unit, is that's a lot of money.
Now they're getting down, you know, five hundred dollars, one thousand dollars and so the you know, the costs of those have come down, and compound that with the fact that they really do add an additional it's just this additional sense of redundancy.
And when it comes to self driving cars, the more redundancy you can add to a vehicle, the better off your you are.
And it's going to make you know, like like you said, for you you don't trust it because you know, there's other technology out there they can do additional information if if if the driver doesn't trust it, then what's the point.
Speaker 1Yeah, yeah, And I think it's mostly just an inclement you know, conditions and things like that.
But you know, overall, it's it's come a long way, I mean a really long way on the Tesla for sure.
I do want to talk about this because I get these questions all the time.
People say, why can't we get these cheap Chinese evs here in the US, I mean over in China, don't they have all these like super inexpensive EV's And that's just not the case here.
What's going on with that?
Speaker 7So the cheap evs in China has to do with a lot of different For one thing, there's a lot of incentives that the government has given it to Chinese automakers and the Chinese battery manufacturers in order to essentially, uh supercharge that industry.
Chinese battery technology is lead, you know, light years ahead of everyone else right now.
But you know, they have they've they've gotten a lot of uh, you know, influx of money, you know, so incentives from the government.
So there's that.
But the ham alligation is a is a weird word, hamuligation, they want to say it out loud, but it is creating a vehicle that will meet the regulatory rules of a region.
So in China, their homoligation, their regulatory rules are different than the United States.
And in China people don't really drive all that last, most people are living in cities that there's a lot of congestion.
It's not the United States, not you know, the big highways where people are flying down the road to eighty ninety miles an hour.
Over here, we have different rules.
So in order for those really cheap let's say five thousand dollars, ten thousand and fifteen thousand dollars evs to be built so that they meet the regulatory rules of the United States, they're going to be more expensive.
There's really not much that I think the bid dolphin or the seagull is also sold in Mexico and it's like five ten thousand dollars more than the Chinese version.
Speaker 1Ah okay, yeah, so.
Speaker 7So you know they're in Mexico's f mulligation.
Their regulatory system isn't quite as strict as the United States.
So if you bring that car over the United States, you know, now you're talking about you know, sometime that's maybe ten fifteen being twenty five thousand United States, which is still a deal.
I mean, that's really like sort of the big selling point for the slates.
So we are looking at potential for less sense of evs.
But you can't just grab a car from China and bring it over here.
There's there's so many things that have to happen to that vehicle before you can bring it over and then of course we have you know, we can get into the tariff debate and what that means for bringing vehicles into this country, but it really does come down to making sure that the vehicle is built safely for the region it's going into and in order for those Chinese evs that we all see very they are very cheap.
You're like, why can't I get a fifteen thousand dollars EV.
Well, because if you bring that car over here and it get hits, it gets hit by an F one fifty, or if it hits a wall or another car or whatever, it's not going to have the same crash worthiness as the cars that are built specific for this country.
And to be on it, you want to be safe when you're in.
Speaker 1Oh, yes you do.
As someone who was in an accident a couple of months ago, Yes, yes you do.
It means the world ham alligation new word.
Okay, thank you all.
Add that to the list.
Roberto Baldwin, Roberto Baldwin, thanks so much for joining me today.
Uh what's the best way for folks to follow you?
Is it on like Instagram?
Twitter?
Speaker 7I am on Instagram and I am on blue sky and it's.
Speaker 11St r g w y s.
Speaker 1Okay, it looks like stringways.
I'll link you up on the website.
Rich on tech dot tv, thanks so much for joining me today.
Great conversation.
Learned a lot, including a new word.
Coming up.
We are going to open up the feedbag rich on tech dot tv.
Submit your your feedback right now.
We've got some of it here.
We're gonna get some more, I guess right back after this.
The celebrity impersonation scams billions of dollars.
They cost fans and estimated five point three billion dollars in twenty twenty five.
Taylor Swift, Sabrina Carpenter, Billie Eilish the most targeted artists.
So here's what happens.
Hackers take over verified social media accounts and then they push fake tickets, merchandise, crypto and all kinds of VIP offers.
One in five concert tickets sold on social media part of a scam or was fake.
This comes from Billboard and Spikers.
Spikers is a company that protects these social media accounts, so it's in their best interest to let people know that this happens.
Fans are often tricked by fake meet and greets, pre sale links, giveaways and AI.
Of course, as you know, is making all this stuff harder to spot.
But imagine you know, you're a tailor Swift fan.
You want to get tickets to the concert, and they text you and say, hey, we can offer you these tickets.
They just came available one hundred bucks.
Here you go times you know, hundred people they text that too.
I mean it's really wild, So be careful.
And like we learned last week, celebrities do not want to become your friends.
They are not texting you.
They're not trying to win your love.
It's a one way street.
Let's be real with celebrities.
You see them, you love them, They're not really loving you back.
I mean it's great to feel that they do, but let's be real.
Australia first, I think it's the first country in the world to have a social media ban for kids under sixteen.
They've officially banned TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube, snapchat, x Reddit, twitch threads and others.
Platforms have to remove kids that are under sixteen and block new sign ups.
Yes, this is actually happening in the world.
Companies that don't can pay fines.
Now the government says the ban is not perfect on day one.
Obviously, there's two sides to this.
The kids probably don't want it, parents are probably split on it.
Tech butanies obviously don't want it.
But think about the addiction and mental health improvements that it will have on this country.
When no kid has it, you know, nobody worries about the other kid having it.
But here's the thing.
I've not been to Australia during this ban.
I'd be curious to see, like on the ground, what it's like like our kids just completely figuring out how to get around this, our parents helping them get around it.
Or is everyone just like, oh cool, we have no longer have to worry about this in our lives until after sixteen life is better.
And yeah, it probably is.
So we know that kids are really addicted to this stuff.
Their brains are still forming, and it's probably a good thing that Australia took that, even though the tech companies do not want that to happen here in the US.
Let's get to the feedback.
John Wrights in, I liked your story on the ring Doorbell.
I actually bought one of the first models and the company invited me to their Ring Deep Explorers group to beta test new products.
It was a blast trying out all the new gear.
They even gave me professionally monitored devices for life.
Oh wow.
They ended up using one of my suggestions, adding alarm profiles so you can switch to preset alerts and device settings.
It's been a fun ride.
Holden in Orange County says I first found you because you featured my company on your show.
But I believe the best part is I became a fan.
I really enjoy what you do.
Your stories are interesting, entertaining, and you've saved my bacon more than once.
A couple months ago, I was in a panic about being forced to move my desktop and laptop to Windows eleven.
Then you did a segment about installing Windows security updates.
Now I've got an extra year of support.
Brilliant.
Thank you, Holden.
Yes, I remember you coming to the studio do a story.
Diana in California.
Thanks for your hard work and incredible knowledge.
We are blessed.
May God richly bless your family always.
Thank you, Diana.
Let's see Cammy in California.
I really appreciate you.
It's amazing what you do and you still answer all your emails, not all of them, but I do answer a lot.
Your knowledge is so helpful, and you explain things in a way anyone can understand.
And on top that, you've got a lovely family life.
Thank you so much.
Tell me that my kids are screaming at me because I'm trying to take their screen time away, but yes, I do appreciate it.
Carolyn says, I'm a Substack newsletter subscriber.
I was delighted when you took over the tech news on KFI.
You're an everyman nerd in the nicest way.
You're down to earth and explain things so everyone can understand.
Keep it up.
Thank you, Carolyn.
Don we got a lot.
I think it's just the holiday spirit.
So many kind words this week.
Don says, thank you for trying to make tech simple for the rest of us.
I always appreciate how you break things down, even when topics are way beyond my brain.
Dust blessings Don and Jules in Hawaii says we were on vacation and so you pop up on the Hawaii News.
Very cool moment.
Congratulations on your success.
Jules.
You know I know I'm on in Hawaii.
I know we're on on TV.
I'm not sure on the radio, but I always say, like, shouldn't I be able to go to Hawaii at any time?
And like right off that entire trip because I'm on TV there, Yes, I would think so.
But it's so funny.
I don't advertise the fact that we're on in a bunch of different places, but people always text me when they're in their hotel room and they see my TV segment show up on their hotel room TV and they're like, Rich, wait, what how am I watch?
It always throws people for a loop.
So yes, and then the radio show, obviously we're on in different places.
People don't take a picture of their radio, but they do text me and say I was traveling or I was driving through and I found you anyway, thank you.
No matter how you consume this show, that's going to do it.
For this episode, you can find links to everything I mentioned on my website.
Go to rich on tech dot tv.
I'm on social media.
Please follow me there at rich on Tech.
Next week we're going to talk to Matt Mazenko.
He is the general manager at Nomo Robo.
We've talked about them on the show.
They are the big spam call and text blocking app.
So he's going to talk about all the things that's happening during the holidays with scams.
Thank you so much for listening.
There are so many ways you can spend your time.
I really do appreciate you spending it right here with me.
If you want to get your feedback in for next week, submit that now at the website.
Rich on tech dot TV, hit contact and I may read your message on the show.
One reminder before I go, please please don't text and drive.
It's not just for your safety, but for the safety of everyone around you.
I know it's tempting you get that message it pops up.
Turn on the feature on your phone where your phone doesn't even ring or doesn't even vibrate, or doesn't even do a notification.
Put that driving mode on.
It'll save you.
Just I'm telling you from someone who had an accent recently.
Just you don't want to get involved in that.
Please.
Thanks to everyone who makes the show possible.
Adam in today for Bobo.
Fantastic job.
We got Kim on the phones.
Thank you for dealing with all the calls today.
My name is rich Demiro.
I will talk to you real soon.
