Weekly Tech Views 23 – Dec 20, 2015

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Real tech stories. Really shaky analysis.

We’re less than a week from Christmas, so consider this blog my gift to you, because I don’t have your address and have no way of getting you anything else.

I Knew It Would Make A Comeback, Just Like My Acid Washed Jeans… Wait, Says Who?
Google has updated Maps for iOS, enabling the use of offline maps. That’s right, offline maps. Now who’s “the poor schmuck carrying an iPod Touch 4 that’s as useless as a twig at a lightsaber fight”?

Is It Bad If It Takes Ten Minutes For The Form To Load?
New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman is asking New Yorkers to visit a site where customers of Verizon, Cablevision, and Time Warner can test their internet speed against what their providers have promised. Schneiderman is asking customers to submit a screenshot of the results and fill out an online form that asks 1) who their ISP is, 2) the speed they were promised, and 3) whether “Schneiderman” makes them think of the superintendent from the 70’s sitcom One Day at a Time, like the mayor keeps saying.

If their connection doesn’t measure up to expectations, it’s probable that there will be hints for optimizing speed at the customer end, while if promised speeds are achieved, customers will be asked to explain if they feel their unholy deal with Beelzebub was worth it.

Why Do The Seventh Graders Get Everything?
Starting next week, the majority of drone owners will need to register with the Federal Aviation Administration. Pilots must provide their name, home address, and email address and be at least thirteen years old. The legally mandated five dollar registration fee will raise a token amount of revenue for the federal government, a total dwarfed by that amassed from the suddenly burgeoning market of 10- to 12-year-olds desperate for fake IDs.

It’s A Safety Concern, Because I’m Getting Ready To Punch Somebody
After airlines banned “hoverboards” (two-wheeled, self-balancing scooters)–deeming many of the batteries to be fire and explosion hazards–Amazon has stopped selling certain models until they can be proven safe. Some, myself included, believe this move would have been justified long ago, for all manufacturers, because, yes, fires and explosions are not great, but more importantly THEY AREN’T HOVERBOARDS! THEY DON’T HOVER–THEY HAVE WHEELS! I GUESS I’LL CALL MY SHOES HOVERSHOES! AT LEAST THEY LEAVE THE GROUND EVERY OTHER STEP!

The Wheels Of Justice Turn Slo–They Are Turning, Aren’t They?
Samsung has asked the Supreme Court to hear their appeal of a smartphone patent dispute with Apple that began over four years ago, and was initially decided in Apple’s favor over three years ago. The Supreme Court asked both parties to be patient, and will consider whether or not to hear the appeal as soon as they finish with Tesla v Edison.

Sure, Freedom Of Speech, Within Limits
There are reports that Homeland Security is planning to examine the social media accounts of foreigners applying for visas. They would presumably eliminate applicants for references to terrorist ties, while the remainder would be forwarded to a committee flagging occurrences of “Kardashian,” “Real Housewives,” and the barest hint of The Force Awakens spoilers.

So About Three Inches Of Mulch, You Say?
Speaking of Star Wars spoilers, a new Chrome extension called Force Block will block web pages containing spoilers for The Force Awakens, instead loading a screen with a Star Wars joke. This allows those of us who have not yet seen the movie to freely navigate the remainder of the web–an archive of geocities gardening blogs last updated in 2003.

Do I Need A Watch To Count The Steps From My Bed To My Couch And Back?
Pebble has introduced Pebble Health, their first foray into fitness-tracking. Initially it will track only steps and sleep, but hopes are that the first update will start to allow comparisons between the two, and when minutes of sleep exceeds number of steps, it will immediately sync to your phone and block access to the GrubHub app.

Here’s A Nutty Idea
Rumor has it that Google plans to use its self-driving cars in a ride service that would rival Uber. There are further rumors that the autonomous car division will become a stand-alone company under Google parent Alphabet, proving definitively that they care nothing about my feelings. If they did, the cars would remain under Google and the Uber competitor would be named Goober.

I Guess It’s Official
Facebook announced that Messenger will have a Transportation option in the More menu, allowing users to access ridesharing services. Currently, Uber is the only provider, but Facebook expects to add more in the coming months, and down the road one would expect to see Goober. Yeah, I’m calling it that, whatever they decide.

Hue Know What I Mean *
A software update to the Philips Hue lighting system prevented users from adding third-party bulbs to the system until they are certified “Friends of Hue.”

“Friends of who?”

“Friends of Hue.”

“Friends of me? Why would they care about my friends?”

“No, Friends of Hue.”

“Hugh who?”

“What? I’m right here.”

“No. Hugh… who?”

“Hue… nobody. Just Hue.”

“Just me? What happened to my friends?”

“Why can’t you get this? We’re talking about Philips Hue.”

“Phillips, Hugh? Why would you say it like that?”

“Why? Because that’s what it is!”

“Not Hugh Phillips?”

“No, Philips Hue.”

“What about his friends?”

“Whose friends?”

“The friends of Hugh. The friends of Phillips, Hugh.”

“Listen. It’s Philips Friends of Hue.”

“So Phillip’s friends are also Hugh’s friends?”

“I… you… it’s…”

“Wait a minute; I get it! You mean Philips the company! They make a lighting system called Hue! Bulbs have to be certified “Friends of Hue” to be used in the system, like to replace those little portable lights, the… uh…”

“Yes! The Philips Hue Go!”

“Hugo who?”

 

* Apologies to Abbott and Costello

 

Need to get a gift for someone, but worried that it won’t arrive by Christmas?

Well, I’ve got the answer.

Worried that they might not fully appreciate a book filled with technology nonsense?

Well, it will arrive by Christmas.

The Internet is Like a Snowblower (And 200 Other Things I Got Wrong About Tech This Year) is a collection of the year’s Weekly Tech Views, is available immediately for the Kindle or Kindle app, and, at $2.99, is 40% less expensive than a drone pilot registration (yet contains many more words!).

Check it out at Amazon here.

Snowblower Cover - Original - Final

And if you’re looking for a short holiday story that I’m going to classify as “humorous,” (there’s really no other option for the origin story of a Christmas napkin) for the bargain price of FREE, The Christmas Napkin will be exactly that price this coming Thursday and Friday, Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. After all, there’s no rule saying you can’t read this AND The Night Before Christmas.

FREE at Amazon here (Dec 24 & 25)

Creative Commons License
Weekly Tech Views Blog by Mike Range is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

DTNS 2649 – The Retail Force Awakens

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.comApple and Samsung get agreements to start mobile payments in China and Target is reportedly investigating their own. Patrick Norton and Tom Merritt discuss why mobile payments is such a mess.

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A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

DTNS 2648 – WhatsApp Judge?

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.comBrazil briefly bans WhatsApp and Turner will kick off their new esports coverage with a CS:GO tourney at CES. Jenn Cutter talks with Tom Merritt about whether Turner can avoid past esports TV mistakes and what’s in store for esports in general in 2016.

MP3

Using a Screen Reader? Click here

Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

DTNS 2647 – Searching For 2015

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.comEurope’s clamping down on piracy while the US tries to sneak in a cybersurveillance bill. Tom Merritt and Scott Johnson talk about that and why “Facebook” is still the top Google search of the year.

MP3

Using a Screen Reader? Click here

<!–Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.–>

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

DTNS 2646 – Compression and Chill

Logo by Mustafa Anabtawi thepolarcat.comNetflix plans to reduce data consumption by up to 20% by intelligently compressing every video and maybe every scene. They say we won’t even notice. Todd Whitehead and Tom Merritt discuss.

MP3

Using a Screen Reader? Click here

Multiple versions (ogg, video etc.) from Archive.org.

Please SUBSCRIBE HERE.

A special thanks to all our supporters–without you, none of this would be possible.

If you are willing to support the show or give as little as 5 cents a day on Patreon. Thank you!

Big thanks to Dan Lueders for the headlines music and Martin Bell for the opening theme!

Big thanks to Mustafa A. from thepolarcat.com for the logo!

Thanks to our mods, Kylde, TomGehrke, sebgonz and scottierowland on the subreddit

Show Notes
To read the show notes in a separate page click here!

Cordkillers 100 – Cat Video Stink

How YouTube could win a Golden Globe and why Mystery Science Theater is genius.

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CordKillers: 100 – Cat Video Stink
Recorded: December 14 2015
Guest: Hammond Chamberlain

Intro Video

Primary Target

  • 23% of Households Will Be Cord-Cutters by 2019, According to eMarketer
  • The Future of Television: More Choices and Greater Quality
  • Cord-Cutting Is Accelerating
    -The total number of households that don’t subscribe to pay-TV by the end of 2015 will be about 17% of U.S. households.
    -Analyst eMarketer estimates 23% US hh w/o trad. TV by 2019
    – WSJ says 20.8 mm by end of this year 17%
    – Logan Hill WSJ interview on future of TV
    – President of AMC Josh Sapan “Before the current generation, the term “TV show” meant something a little dumb. And so you can say there are too many shows relative to the economics of the old system, but with the new system, I would not say there are too many shows.
    – Maker Studios President Ynon Kreiz “No matter what device you use, the big advantage is the freedom to make those choices. I see a golden age of television that’s less about apps or channels, and more about the when and where.”
    – Lachlan Murdoch, Executive chariman 21st Century Fox “In a world of limitless choice, mediocrity is death”
    – Max Cohen, head of Mobile at Oculus Rift “ Down the line, we’ll get full-length VR movies, where you’re the star and interact with all the characters. We’ll get a 360-degree camera at the end of the piano at a Billy Joel concert, where it feels like he’s singing to you. “

Signal Intelligence

  • Amazon and Netflix land a dozen Golden Globe nominations
  • Cord-cutting services net huge nominations at Golden Globes
    – Amazon (5)
    – Transparent (Best Comedy)
    – Mozart in the Jungle (Best Comedy)
    – Gael Garcia Bernal – Mozart (Best Actor Comedy)
    – Jeffrey Tambor – Transparent (Best Actor Comedy)
    – Jusith Light – Transparent (Best supporting)

    Netflix (8)
    – Robin Wright House of Cards (Best Actress – Drama)
    – Orange is the New Black (Best Comedy)
    – Uzo Aduba OITNB (Best supporting )
    – Idris Elba – Beasts of No Nation (Supporting actor)
    – Narcos (Best Drama Series)
    – Wagner Moura – Narcos (Best Actor Drama)
    – Aziz Ansari Master of None (Best Actor – Comedy)
    – Lily Tomlin Grace and Frankie (Best Actress Comedy)

    – Hulu (1)
    – Casual (Best Comedy)

Gear Up

Front Lines

  • Verizon Fios will let you stream from your DVR when you’re out of the house
    – Verizon Fios TV service customers can now stream “Nearly all of their DVR-recorded shows” anywhere with an Internet connection. So nearly as good as setting up a slingbox. Verizon likes things that are almost something. Like FiOS TV’s director Maitreyi Krishnaswamy saying on a TV of Tomorrow conference panel that she has “pretty much cut the cord.” She was talking up Verizon’s Go90 service.
  • AT&T to Launch Mobile Entertainment Service, CEO Says
    – AT&T Chairman and CEO Randall Stephenson told an investor conference last week that AT&T is planning to launch its own mobile entertainment service. He also said that in January AT&T will launch a ”premium content” package that will offer “mobile stacked content together with a really robust wireless asset.” He also said they would offer “proprietary content” through DirecTV or mobile and possibly in cooperation with joint venture Otter Media which has a majority stake in Fullscreen. DIGITAL!
  • Yahoo Launches A Video Guide App For Cord Cutters
    – Yahoo wanted cord cutters so bad it paid for a whole season of Community.It’s latest effort to win your love is a new app called Yahoo Video Guide for iOS and Android. You look for shows to watch and it will find them among services you have installed, like HBO, Netflix, Amazon and Hulu, and even launch the apps for you. 
  • That Mystery Science 3000 Theater Kickstarter Just Set A New Record
    – Mystery Science Theater raised a record-breaking $5.76 million on Kickstarter towards 14 episodes including a Christmas special. The new MST3K will star Felicia Day, Jonah Ray, and Paton Oswalt and Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland are tapped to write!
  • Sling TV adds local content to its Latino streaming service
    – Sling TV’s spanish-language package Sling Latino is adding local broadcast feeds from Univision and UniMas. (Univision’s own service offers local news in New York, Los Angeles and Houston)
  • Google Play Movies and TV gets AirPlay support, but Apple TV app still missing
    – Google updated it’s Google Play app for iOS to include airplay. So you can now send your Google Play videos to your 3rd or 4th generation Apple TV. 

Under Surveillance

Dispatches from the Front

Dear Cord Killers,

My email should be reaching you in time for the last episode before the release of Star Wars: The Force Awakens. I’m sure that you’ll be going to see it on release day, and so I need to ask you for a solemn promise: PLEASE. DO. NOT. SPOIL.

Personally, I’m waiting until I am back home with my family, so I won’t be seeing Star Wars until around Christmas. I’m aware that other places and people will be throwing spoilers left and right, but I’d like you to set the standard: Please keep spoilers to Spoilerin’ Time, at least for the first two weeks.

Please (and I’m looking at you, Brian) try to avoid dropping little tidbits here and there as you skirt around important plot points. If you liked it, or you hated it, I’m fine with that, and by all means say so, but I don’t need to know why right now.

Or, if you don’t think you’ll be able to contain yourself, please tell me now, and I’ll hold off on watching Cord Killers until the new year.

See you on the other side!

Karl

 

 

 

 

Hey Brian & Tom,
 
With the release of The Force Awakens just around the corner, I thought I’d share my view on the craziness surrounding the premier of this movie.
 
I’m 23, I’m a geek, and I love sci-fi and fantasy stuff. That being said, I’ve never been in to Star Wars. My parents where never really in to it, and when the prequels came out, I was still a bit too young to really notice or care on my own. I actually hadn’t even seen a Star Wars movie the whole way through until 2013, when I decided I’d finally sit down and watch all the movies.
 
I hate to say it, but I was really underwhelmed. I’d had basically everything spoiled from me from the ridiculous number of references in pop culture, and that certainly contributed to my indifference, but besides just that, it seemed like any other cheesy 70’s sci-fi movie. I wanted to love Star Wars as much as I see everyone else loving it, but I couldn’t understand the hype surrounding this franchise.
 
So I thought about it for a while, talked to some of my friends about it, and I think I understand why it seems like so many people love it and why I personally can’t get in to it: Nostalgia. Everyone 30+ seems to LOVE everything Star Wars, but when I speak to people around my age about it, they respond with the same passive interest as me. No one hates it, but they don’t love it either.
 
I think a lot of the hype surrounding Star Wars comes from the fact that people grew up with it, and as children we’re much more forgiving and think things are much cooler. My generation actually has something similar to this: Harry Potter. It comes up in like 90% of conversations we have, we get super hyped for anything new in the series, and we look back on it with fond memories. My friends and I are even trying to plan a trip to Harry Potter World in Universal Studios. On the other hand, I don’t think Star Wars has come up more than a handful of times in conversation, even with the leadup to Episode VII.
 
It’s been an odd experience watching the hype build for The Force Awakens. It seems like 50% of the news stories are related to it in some way, podcasts are dedicated to it, no one seems to be able to stop talking about it. I’m not complaining, and I’m not asking you guys to stop, I just think it’s interesting from an outsiders perspective.
 
Of course I will go see the movie when it comes out, and I do hope I like it enough to start getting in to this series a bit more. Just thought I’d share. “””

Jacob

 

 

 

How can we make an argument for ABC, NBC, CBS and FOX to stream their programing on demand? Now we record their shows and blow by the commercial with the 30 second forward button. Streaming on demand we are forced to watch the commercials.  Try to fast forward and they make you watch another commercial.  Would that not be a good selling point to their clients? 
Best Regards,  

Stan

 

 

 If NBC wants me to fork over $4 a month for their streaming comedy service Hoo-Ha* there is only one way for them to make it happen. Stream all of David Letterman’s Late Night and his morning show and I will gladly subscribe.

* Hoo-Ha may not be the name for their service but it should be.

Mark

 

 

Just wanted to share a thought on YouTube Red after hearing you talk about the value of it.  I have to admit, I was definitely one of the people that saw no reason why I would ever pay for YouTube Red (since YouTube is free after-all)  but after using it, unbeknownst to me, since the day it came out I don’t think I will want to go back to the days of free YouTube with ads. 

Google/YouTube made the smart move of including this as part of the Google Play All Access membership.  I signed up for a great music service and ended up with a great ad free video service as well.  
I was also pleasantly surprised at how seamlessly it all appeared on my devices. Roku, XboxOne, and obviously my phone all gave me the YouTube Red logo at the top of the app on day one.

The way they did this reminds me of when I had my 4 disc a month Netflix account in college that then introduced streaming, and eventually lead to my streaming only account.  Or my Amazon Prime account that I started for the shipping that  also lead to yet another streaming account I use on most of my devices.

Have you being using Red? Thoughts?

Cheers!

– Byron

 

 

Nile Says: I think Brian asked about this, but it might have been someone else on one of Tom’s other shows. I never speed up the playback of a podcast I’m intimately familiar with, because the change in voices messes with my head. HOWEVER, when I start listening to a new podcast, I’ve been in the habit of playing it at around 1.25x so I get the efficiency, and my mind thinks the hosts voices sound that from the very start. Thanks for the show guys!

Nile

 

Links

patreon.com/cordkillers

2015 Winter Movie Draft