Podchaser Logo
Home
Whack Me In The Face

Whack Me In The Face

Released Wednesday, 24th January 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Whack Me In The Face

Whack Me In The Face

Whack Me In The Face

Whack Me In The Face

Wednesday, 24th January 2024
Good episode? Give it some love!
Rate Episode

Episode Transcript

Transcripts are displayed as originally observed. Some content, including advertisements may have changed.

Use Ctrl + F to search

0:00

John:Not my first rodeo. It's my second.

0:00

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

0:02

John:Pragmatic is a show about technology and contemplating the finer details in their

0:22

John:practical application. By exploring the real-world trade-offs, we dive into how

0:26

John:great ideas can be transformed into products and services that impact our lives.

0:30

John:Pragmatic is entirely supported by you, our listeners. If you'd like to support us and

0:34

John:keep the show ad-free, you can by becoming a Premium Supporter. Premium Support is available

0:39

John:via Patreon and through the Apple Podcasts channel subscription. Premium Supporters have

0:43

John:access to early release, high-quality versions of episodes, as well as bonus material from

0:47

John:all of our shows not available anywhere else. Just visit engineer.network/pragmatic to learn

0:52

John:how you can help this show to continue to be made. Thank you. I'm your host, John Chidjie,

0:57

John:and today I'm joined again once again by my good friend Vic Hudson. How you doing, Vic?

1:00

Vic:>> I'm good, John, how are you?

1:02

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:03

John:Not too bad. I'm enjoying the podcasting booth, aka sweatbox. It's the middle of summer. The

1:08

Vic:>> Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:09

John:air conditioning has not plumbed in properly yet, and hence, oh dear. But that's okay.

1:14

John:It's going to be sweaty, but it's going to be good. Tell me. But you see, you're talking

1:17

Vic:I will trade you weather if you'd like.

1:19

Vic:Do you know what I woke up to this morning?

1:22

Vic:Snow and three degrees Fahrenheit.

1:25

Vic:[LAUGH]

1:28

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:29

John:to the man that used to live in Calgary, mate. I mean, the only thing I didn't like about

1:31

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:33

John:the snow was de-icing my car in the morning in the car park. That's the only thing I didn't

1:38

Vic:Yeah, that blows, that blows really bad.

1:38

John:like. Yeah. Anyway, having said that, I also miss the mountains, and snow is beautiful

1:41

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:46

Vic:It is pretty through the window, through the window.

1:46

John:in its own way. Except when you... Yeah. Yes. When you're trying to get somewhere and there's

1:50

Vic:[LAUGH]

1:52

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:53

John:a foot of it on the ground, it's less good. But anyway. So I've got a whole bunch of stuff

1:56

Vic:Yeah, it's a lot less good then.

1:58

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

2:00

John:I wanted to cover today. I do have a primary topic. Okay. I do have a primary topic, sort

2:03

Vic:What you got, man?

2:05

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

2:06

John:of. But it's all got to do with... You can't call it 3D, right? You've got to call it spatial.

2:14

Vic:Spatial computing, spatial computing.

2:14

John:But we'll get to that. 3D video. But we'll get to that. Yes, that's it. Indeed. I do

2:18

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

2:21

John:all my computing spatially. Oh God, please. I'll call it whatever the hell I want. Expensive

2:22

Vic:You should also not call it Vision Pro, the Vision Pro.

2:26

Vic:[LAUGH]

2:28

Vic:You have to call it Apple Vision Pro.

2:31

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

2:34

John:doorstop. There's another name it may get. Anyway, let's keep going. There's other things

2:38

Vic:Mm, continue, I'm intrigued.

2:40

John:to talk about first. Okay. So just... I touched on it briefly. I have an issue with sound

2:41

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

2:47

John:booth cooling. So I have the air conditioning unit, and I have some of the parts necessary

2:49

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

2:52

John:that I acquired over the holidays. And anyway, unfortunately for me, I don't really have...

2:59

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

2:59

John:How do I put this? I don't have all of the last pieces for me to make a start on it.

3:06

John:Therefore, I haven't done anything about it. So I'm still on a non-air conditioned sound

3:10

John:booth. And there's one other tiny problem. I have no air conditioning in the rest of

3:14

John:my house. My wife spotted a air conditioning unit sitting next to the podcasting booth,

3:20

John:not doing anything. It's the middle of summer. It's 90 degrees Fahrenheit out there regularly.

3:24

Vic:[LAUGH]

3:25

John:So she says, "Well, can't have air conditioning units. Could be doing something constructive."

3:29

John:I'm like, "Yeah, it could be." And so it disappeared into the house. I think that it's borrowed.

3:30

Vic:She stole it, she stole it.

3:34

Vic:[LAUGH]

3:36

John:It's borrowed. And I borrowed it back just for this morning's recording. So there you

3:38

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

3:40

John:go. So I've cooled down the inside of the sound booth, and we're good to go. As soon

3:44

John:as I start to melt into a puddle, we'll take a break. But I don't know. I'm tough. I can

3:49

John:handle this. I say now. Okay. Right. So just a note about that, but we'll move on. I'm

3:51

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

3:57

John:hoping in the next month or two, I'll be able to finish this job because honestly, when

4:00

John:the air conditioning is running in here, it really is quite pleasant. It's just I can't

4:03

John:close the door because there's no exit hole. I got to cut one into the side of it, put

4:07

John:the baffle boxes on. It's on the to-do list. Anyway. All right. So next bit of news that

4:15

John:happened since last time is I finally have solar power back again at my house. I've got

4:20

John:10 kilowatts installed. I mean, technically it's 13.2 kilowatts of panels, and I've got

4:21

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

4:26

John:10 kilowatt three phase inverter. And it's a beautiful system. They're new panels. They've

4:28

Vic:Mm.

4:31

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

4:31

John:been installed much better than the previous panels. And I'm producing something like 80.

4:37

John:I think yesterday was a sunny day. I had 82 kilowatt hours in one day. Very impressive.

4:44

John:So because I can't, yeah. Yeah. I could, yes. If I had batteries, I could run the house

4:45

Vic:That sounds impressive.

4:48

Vic:For those of us that don't speak kilowatt hours, like, what are we looking at here?

4:53

Vic:Can you run the whole house with that, and for how long?

4:58

John:indefinitely provided I was getting, yeah, I was getting, yeah, but I'd have to have

5:00

Vic:Nice.

5:02

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

5:04

John:batteries that could do probably 20 kilowatt hour of storage, which I realized the whole

5:09

Vic:Uh-huh.

5:11

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

5:12

John:thing with storage and capacity has all been messed up thanks to vehicles and stuff. So

5:17

John:technically we measure things in amp hours and such because voltage determines power,

5:21

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

5:22

John:but nevermind. Doesn't matter. Bottom line is I don't have batteries because they're

5:27

John:a little bit pricey still. So maybe someday I'll get a power wall or more likely a cheaper,

5:35

John:equally good Chinese version because they've got some really good ones coming out of China.

5:40

John:Keeping in keeping note that my Tesla model three has Chinese battery packs in it. Right.

5:44

Vic:Right, that's cool.

5:45

John:So the LFP anyway, nevermind. Yeah. Yep. That's right. So my last power bill, yeah. My last

5:47

Vic:Do you, you at least have the thing like where your electric meter runs backwards sometimes,

5:53

Vic:and you get credit from the power company, right?

5:57

Vic:That's sweet.

5:59

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

6:00

John:power bill at this point in time for two months, I think my electricity's cost me a hundred

6:06

John:bucks for two months, which previously it was costing me about $800. So the solar system

6:13

John:is making an enormous difference. And I've been charging the car on solar just by using

6:18

John:a bunch of automations, which are probably going to go away. And then I signed up to

6:22

John:something that we're testing at work, which gives me 8 cents a kilowatt hour charging,

6:27

John:which is pretty cool for my Tesla. But so yeah. But because I'm the sort of, well, a

6:33

John:person that I am, I'm also going to go to my absolute limit as permitted by Queensland

6:39

Vic:Mm-hm.

6:40

John:law, which is 15 kilowatts. So I've got another five kilowatt system I'm waiting for final

6:41

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

6:46

John:approval from the electricity authority that's Energex. So hopefully that gets approved in

6:51

Vic:What's involved in that approval?

6:51

John:the next few weeks and installed sometime late February. That would be cool. And then

6:54

Vic:You expect any, what's involved in that approval?

6:55

John:it'll, I'll have even more. Sorry. Well, no. So the story was that about a year ago, we

6:56

Vic:Do you expect any trouble, or is it just formalities?

6:59

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

7:07

John:applied to have a 15 kilowatt system installed. Actually it was more like 18 months ago and

7:12

John:Energex rejected it because our house, when we got three phase power connected, it was

7:18

John:actually connected up by three independent phases, one from each path, one from each

7:24

John:feeder that came through different physical pathways, which is a big no, no. You can do

7:29

John:it, but you really shouldn't. You can get away with it in residential because generally

7:34

John:you don't have balanced three phase machines. Whereas in an industrial environment, that

7:39

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

7:39

John:would never work because you try and hook up phases A, B and C to an induction motor

7:43

John:and it would just, you'd probably destroy the motor. So anyway, at some point they realized

7:50

John:that that was only temporary and unbeknownst to us, we saw them doing a whole bunch of

7:54

John:upgrades to transformers on like pole mount transformers on the streets. And we had power

7:59

Vic:Right.

8:01

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

8:01

John:outages at our house, multiple power outages, and they pulled a new three phase cable into

8:05

John:our house. And this all just happened. I didn't ask them to do it. They just did it, which

8:10

John:is one of the great things about having an electricity authority that's actually on the

8:14

John:ball and for all of the crap that people give Energex, they were on the ball and they were

8:19

John:fixing up this hack job solution that they had.

8:22

John:Now, as soon as they did that, of course, knowing what I know, I'm looking at the rating

8:26

John:of the transformers because that's what people do when you walk down the street, you look

8:30

John:up and you say, "Oh wow, that's 100 kVA and that's 150. Okay, interesting." Anyway, I

8:31

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

8:35

Vic:I always do that.

8:36

John:know normal people. Yes, I know. Yeah, totally. Yeah. And then you run into the pole and you're

8:37

Vic:Sometimes I get distracted staring at them while I'm driving.

8:41

Vic:[LAUGH]

8:43

John:like, "Oh, but yes." Anyhow, yeah. Anyway, listeners know that Vic has not done that,

8:44

Vic:Right?

8:46

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

8:49

John:so I'm just kidding. Anyhow, moving on.

8:53

John:So I went back to Energex with a new application and the rules had changed since I did the

8:58

John:last application and I had to split the system into two pieces, a 10 kW and a 5 kW. And so

9:05

John:the 10 kW got approved and the 5 kW got lost in the system. So the 10 kW got installed

9:12

John:and I'm still waiting for the 5 kW. Now, because they've upgraded all of the backend, it should

9:16

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

9:18

John:just go ahead. It should, but I don't know what's going to happen. We'll see. So hopefully,

9:25

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

9:28

John:we'll find out soon. Hopefully, it is just a formality. All right?

9:32

Vic:That's cool, that's cool.

9:34

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

9:35

John:The one thing I did do, creatively speaking at least, over the break, the Christmas holidays,

9:41

John:is I did an episode of Pragmatic Electric, which I hadn't done in a while. I did an episode

9:45

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

9:46

John:of... So now I made 10 episodes of Pragmatic Electric. That is a video version of this

9:50

John:podcast about DC charging infrastructure. This particular episode is very locally focused.

9:56

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

9:58

John:So if you're not in Southeast Queensland or even Queensland as the state, you're probably

10:04

John:not going to care. But it's really been wonderful to see there's been a massive rollout of charging

10:10

John:infrastructure. Well, you can certainly do that, and I would

10:11

Vic:What if we wanna watch it just to see Chigi?

10:14

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

10:15

John:encourage you to do so. The video itself has had an enormous 49 views as of last night.

10:17

Vic:Okay. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

10:21

John:I think I checked it was. So I've almost cracked 50 views. Anyway, it's not a big thing. It's

10:27

John:just something to do to scratch that creativity itch and sort of thing. I figure that having

10:32

John:that on this show and going into all those details is probably not of very much interest

10:36

John:to the audience of this particular podcast. So if you want to, there'll be a link in the

10:38

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

10:40

John:show notes. Feel free to check it out. When I was doing... Why thank you, Vic. Oh, dear.

10:43

Vic:I'll post about it. Vic:Should get you at least two, three more views.

10:46

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

10:48

Vic:[LAUGH]

10:51

Vic:I do what I can, man. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

10:52

John:Oh, no, I know. It's awesome. So honestly, I just wanted to say about EVs, I came across

10:53

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

10:59

John:this in the last couple of weeks. I've been back at work now for two through three weeks

11:06

John:now. So I only had that one week over Christmas, a week and a half. You take the days off between

11:13

John:Christmas Day and New Year's Day and call it a holiday when it's really not because

11:17

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

11:20

John:you're running around going to family events and you're like, "Yeah, okay." Anyway, no,

11:23

Vic:There's not a lot of rest involved.

11:25

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

11:26

John:that's the problem. I want a holiday where I can rest. Anyway, it's all good, really.

11:29

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

11:32

John:All right. So I came across this article because there's a lot of electric vehicle hate, I

11:40

John:would say. I think it's a fair way of putting it. And so the hate is going to hate, hate,

11:44

John:hate, said Tay Tay. And anyway, yeah, so EV fires, they're like, "Oh, electric cars, they

11:45

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

11:54

John:catch on fire a lot and they're really, really dangerous," and so on and so forth. And I

11:58

John:always suspected that was BS because the number of cars I've seen on the side of a road that

12:04

John:have burnt out, and even one time I drove past a car that was currently on fire, gasoline

12:12

Vic:I was gonna say, I'll bet it ran on some sort of dinosaur fuel.

12:12

John:powered, petrol powered car. Yeah, exactly. People don't realize that they forget. And

12:16

Vic:[LAUGH] Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

12:21

John:I know that when they went away from single skin to double skin fuel tanks, and there

12:27

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

12:28

John:are improvements to the placing of fuel lines and everything in a car and fuel injectors

12:33

John:versus carburetors, and that they're all incremental improvements in safety and such for resilience.

12:40

John:Firewalls, for example, for protecting occupants and so on. But the bottom line is that I found

12:42

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

12:47

John:an article, I mean, it is an Australian article that's referencing an American study. So the

12:52

John:link is to the Australian article, but the American study that this came from is in there

12:53

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

12:58

John:anyway. So they found that petrol and diesel vehicles experienced 1,530 fires per 100,000

13:05

Vic:Right. John:vehicles, whereas only 25 out of 100,000 electric vehicles caught fire. That's fully electric

13:06

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

13:11

John:vehicles too. So I think that that's good to clear up some fear, uncertainty, and doubt

13:12

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

13:18

John:that's often spread about electric vehicles. But of course, me being me, it's not entirely

13:23

John:that simple. And I kind of know that because that's not fair from the point of view of

13:28

John:there's no breakdown of the age of those cars. So the chances that a brand new car that's

13:33

John:gasoline powered is going to catch on fire is much lower than one that's 10 years old.

13:36

John:I think that's fair to say, because like rubber deteriorates and damage happens. So the number

13:38

Vic:Correct. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

13:44

John:of electric vehicles out there would not be 10 years old. I mean, there'd be some that

13:49

John:are 10 years old, absolutely, but there would not be very many. So yeah, you're not going

13:52

Vic:A few tests, listen, search, yeah.

13:54

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

13:55

John:to have a 10 year old, well, you're going to have some 10 year old Teslas because the

13:59

John:first Model S was sold in 2014. So you will actually, but you're not going to have that

14:04

John:many. So saying like a hundred thousand new cars of either type, it's like that. So I

14:05

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

14:14

John:realize there's a flaw in that. And I suspect the number of EVs that are of the same age

14:19

John:would actually have more than 25 out of a hundred thousand vehicles would have caught

14:24

John:fire. I don't think it'd be like an order of magnitude or two orders of magnitude more,

14:28

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

14:30

John:but it would certainly be a lot more, but it should still be less. Yeah, exactly. You

14:32

Vic:Maybe. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

14:35

Vic:Yeah. Vic:I mean, well, the bottom line is, you know, when you're talking about petrol and diesel vehicles, I mean, the principle behind the whole thing is that the stuff is flammable.

14:45

Vic:[LAUGH] Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

14:47

John:light that stuff up, it goes bang inside an enclosed space, drives a piston, makes you

14:50

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

14:52

John:go. Yeah. So it's kind of like, "Hmm, is this stuff volatile?" Anyway. But I mean, this

14:57

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

14:59

John:is the thing that people need to get a grip on. And that is that any device that's capable

15:03

John:of storing energy is capable of releasing that energy in a very rapid fashion if something

15:10

John:goes wrong. And that something that goes wrong will vary depending upon the technology. Like

15:14

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

15:15

John:in a new case of a nuclear reactor, just pull all the control rods out and see what happens.

15:19

John:They did that at Chernobyl and it went real well. Anyway. Indeed. Indeed. All right. And

15:20

Vic:No, no, I saw some things that taught me that was not a good thing to do.

15:26

Vic:[LAUGH]

15:29

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

15:31

John:speaking of electric vehicles, one of the long anticipated vehicles from Tesla finally

15:37

John:got released since we last spoke. And that is the Cybertruck. What are your thoughts

15:39

Vic:Oh, boy.

15:41

Vic:No. Vic:[LAUGH]

15:43

John:and thoughts on the Cybertruck, Vic? Yeah. Yeah. See, I

15:45

Vic:I, mm, that thing is god awful ugly, man.

15:49

Vic:[LAUGH] Vic:It's just god awful.

15:52

Vic:If I were in the market, I am actually in the market for a pickup truck.

15:56

Vic:I'm sorry, Scott, because he's going to hate to hear that because it's been a point of contention.

16:01

Vic:But if I were in the market for an EV truck, I've actually been pretty impressed with the Chevy Silverado EV.

16:09

Vic:The Cybertruck is god awful ugly, man.

16:12

Vic:[LAUGH] Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

16:13

John:think that the problem with the Cybertruck and its looks is that if you're trying to

16:18

John:go for mass adoption, having something that is that striking and that polarizing, that's

16:25

John:going to work against you because you're going to be trying to normalize and get... It does.

16:26

Vic:It looks like it's from a Mad Max movie, man.

16:30

Vic:[LAUGH] Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

16:32

John:It does a bit, yeah. I'd say more Blade Runner, but I mean, the reality is that, well, yeah,

16:35

Vic:Oh, that's the same difference.

16:37

Vic:[LAUGH] Vic:I mean, not the same difference, but, you know, yeah.

16:39

John:it has some things in common. I mean, I guess my point is if in fact you're trying to get

16:42

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

16:46

John:as many of these out there as possible to solve the, "I want to build a truck, that

16:52

John:pickup truck that the majority of Americans are going to want to buy instead of their

16:56

John:traditional gasoline powered counterparts," making it look like something like that is

17:02

John:probably not... Making it look like something that's completely fundamentally different,

17:07

John:you then force people who would ordinarily buy a Chevy Silverado or a Ford F-150, and

17:14

John:they're going to look at this and they're going to say, "This thing looks terrible.

17:16

John:I'm not buying that crap." People that buy pickup trucks don't always buy them because

17:22

John:they want to be looked at. They buy them because they're practical and they're a truck. They

17:28

John:don't have to have a presence. You know what I mean? I don't know. Some people get off

17:33

John:on people staring at them. When I first got my Model 3 here in Australia,

17:39

John:it was the first few months that the Model 3 was available. I was not the first. I was

17:44

John:probably the... In Queensland, I was probably in the first thousand or two. It's not like

17:53

John:you're... How do I put this? It's like I did get people staring at me and waving and pointing

18:01

John:for the first few months, but after six months, there were so many of them on the road, it

18:02

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

18:05

John:just stopped. The Cybertruck strikes me as the sort of car that because it is so different,

18:06

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

18:12

John:you're going to get that for years. Some people don't want that. It made me feel a bit uncomfortable

18:16

John:sometimes because I'm just trying to go to the shops, mate. Don't stop me and have a

18:17

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

18:21

John:conversation about my car. I just want to go and buy some butter. What gives?

18:26

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

18:27

John:Anyway. Yeah. So, bottom line, Cybertruck is on sale. A part of me wants one. A part

18:34

John:of me measured their garage. Oh, actually, no. That was a... Yeah. I guess technically

18:37

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

18:38

John:it was a part of me and the measuring tape. I measured my garage and it won't fit. It'll

18:43

Vic:[LAUGH]

18:44

John:fit in my shed. Just. But yeah, it's a beast of a thing, eh? It's a beast of a thing. Honestly,

18:47

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

18:55

John:American pickup trucks are insanely huge. There's so few places in Australia where those

19:02

John:cars would fit because all of our cars are all based on... We did have bigger cars for

19:09

John:a while. Australian-made cars were bigger, but the Japanese won out because the Japanese

19:14

John:cars were, quite frankly, cheaper, more reliable, and more economical. So, that's why people

19:21

John:went for them. So, more than, I think, 60% of the cars that we have in Australia are

19:26

John:Japanese and those cars are just smaller by design. So, these big American pickups, we

19:32

John:look at them and they won't fit in 80, 90% of the car parks, unless you go into the handful

19:38

John:of Costco's that are out there. There's a handful of other newer shopping centers that

19:42

John:got wider car park spaces for them. But otherwise, you'll park in a car park and you don't have

19:46

John:to take up two spots. Otherwise, you won't be able to open the doors to get out. It's

19:48

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

19:50

John:just not going to work. So, anyway. I would like one, I think. Yeah, well, maybe. Good

19:53

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

20:06

John:luck scratching that thing. I tell you what, though, if it does get scratched, good luck

20:10

John:getting a scratch out. Oh, funny thing. You know what? As much as people like to take

20:19

John:the piss out of Tesla, they are so good at taking the piss out of themselves. It's like

20:24

John:on the touchscreen in the Tesla, you can actually open up a page on there that shows you an

20:31

John:isometric view of your car and you can spin the car around and just have a look at it

20:33

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

20:36

John:and it's like, "Oh, that's kind of cool." Like a 3D model sort of thing, right? And

20:41

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

20:41

John:on the Cybertruck, they have exactly the same thing. But there's a hidden Easter egg in

20:46

John:the Cybertruck. If you actually go into the Cybertruck's 3D model and you tap and keep

20:51

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

20:52

John:tapping on the glass, on the side window glass, it smashes. It comes up and it goes, "Yeah."

20:55

Vic:Does it break?

20:57

Vic:Nice. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

21:00

Vic:Well, at least I've got a sense of humor.

21:00

John:It's like so good. And you can buy. I know, right? It's like for all the crap that people

21:02

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

21:06

John:lay on Tesla and everything and Elon Musk's an idiot and whatever the hell people say,

21:11

John:it's like the haters are going to hate, but you can't deny the fact that at least they

21:16

John:don't try to bury stuff. At least they're being honest and they're owning it. And I

21:20

John:respect that. It takes a certain kind of company attitude to be able to laugh at yourself and

21:22

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

21:28

John:say, "Maybe throwing a massive ball bearing into the glass was not a good demo to do on

21:33

John:the live stage." Anyway, it's so funny. And it wasn't scripted, eh? It wasn't. Because

21:34

Vic:No, it was not.

21:37

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

21:41

John:Elon Musk is like, "Oh my f***ing God." The look on his face, he's been saying, "Yeah,

21:44

Vic:[LAUGH]

21:46

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

21:48

John:it's bulletproof." Oh my f***ing God. No, no, no, no. Anyway, moving on. Now, last time

21:49

Vic:I can't imagine any circumstances where they would have done that on purpose.

21:53

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

22:00

John:we spoke on Is This The Show, which is episode five, I was complaining about a whole bunch

22:05

John:of stuff. Specifically, one of them though, I was complaining about Nova. And I was saying,

22:06

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

22:11

John:"Oh, yeah, I can't really justify buying Nova because it's expensive. It's like $9.99 US

22:16

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

22:20

John:and every year if I want updates, I got to pay it again. I don't know how I should get

22:24

John:use out of it." Well, the truth is that once I configured it the way I liked it, I kept

22:29

Vic:Uh-huh.

22:31

John:using it and then I kept using it. And then I'm like, "Damn, this is so good." And so

22:33

Vic:It's really nice, John.

22:35

Vic:It's really nice. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

22:39

John:I bought it. I caved in and I bought it. And I don't regret it. It's... yeah. Oh no. Oh

22:42

Vic:It's a great text editor.

22:46

Vic:You've got terminals built in local and remote.

22:49

Vic:You've got local and remote file browsers built in.

22:53

Vic:It's basically got transmit built in, honestly.

22:56

Vic:It's just, it's really nice.

22:58

Vic:And there's a pretty good set of extensions and extension library for it.

22:58

John:yeah, it does. Yeah. It truly is amazing as an app. And it is honestly... yeah. I don't

23:02

Vic:Depending on what you're working on, you can find a lot of things to help with that.

23:06

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

23:12

John:regret buying it now. Well, paying for it for 12 months. And it's been fantastic. Hasn't

23:18

John:missed a beat. It doesn't chew up memory the way Adam did, which is great. And it gives

23:24

John:me nicer choices and it's just easy to configure. And I'm not moving back. And the latest update,

23:30

John:which I forget the version number of it, but the latest update, .8. I think it might be

23:34

Vic:Mm-hm.

23:35

John:10.8, whatever the latest update is. They really improved their Git integration as well.

23:36

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

23:40

Vic:Yeah.

23:40

John:So you can have a look at your commit tree comments and branches and everything. And

23:42

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

23:44

John:it is so sweet. All within Nova. So, yep. Hats off to Panic. Honestly, it is a great

23:46

Vic:Yeah.

23:48

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

23:51

John:app and it is worth it, I think. Even though I was humming and harring and I was annoyed

23:55

John:at the time. I did it anyway. And the fact that I did it anyway is a testament to how

24:00

Vic:Yeah. John:good it is, I think. So, yes. Yeah. Yeah. No, it is a fantastic app. So I just wanted

24:01

Vic:I mean, honestly speaking, the subscription pricing on it does kind of hurt.

24:06

Vic:But if you're gonna get use out of it and really appreciate it,

24:11

Vic:that's not too bad of a price for the kind of tool that it is.

24:15

Vic:It's very nice.

24:17

Vic:And it's just, nothing comes close to it to me.

24:22

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

24:24

John:to mention by way of, yes, I finally pulled the trigger and I rescind my previous frustration.

24:30

John:I just did it. Anyway. All right. Moving on. So I want to start now talking about the first

24:38

John:thing, which is last time we spoke on this show, we talked about my impending arrival

24:44

John:of an iPhone 15 Pro Max. So, yes. So I did actually buy one only a few days afterwards,

24:46

Vic:Correct.

24:48

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

24:55

John:after we recorded, I believe. So I know that was a few months ago, but I have been using

24:58

Vic:Mm-hm.

25:00

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

25:01

John:my iPhone 15 Pro Max now for a couple of months, with its leather case. Sorry, guy. And it

25:09

John:is, it's, I mean, honestly, of course I'm going to say this because the phone I have

25:14

John:now is my favorite phone of all time. Like my favorite lens and the camera is the newest

25:19

John:one I just bought. So, but this, this phone, my only complaint with the Max size has always

25:26

John:been damn it's heavy. And so if I put it in shorts that I'm wearing and those shorts don't

25:28

Vic:Mm-hm.

25:30

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

25:31

John:have like original elastic that actually holds up, it just, my pants start falling down,

25:38

Vic:Mm.

25:38

John:it's, it's like, the thing is a brick. I didn't, no, no screw belts. I'll do belts for work.

25:40

Vic:Gonna need a belt.

25:42

Vic:[LAUGH]

25:45

Vic:No.

25:47

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

25:48

John:That's it. Anyway, so, no, this is my back pocket. That is my back pocket. I'm talking

25:50

Vic:Is it any better if you put it in your back pocket?

25:53

Vic:Sorry, Clay.

25:55

Vic:[LAUGH] Vic:Okay, this is your back pocket.

25:58

Vic:All right, carry on.

25:59

John:about my back pocket. Yeah. Anyway. All right. So bottom line is it is an amazing phone and

26:00

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

26:05

John:comparing it to an iPhone 12, which is a three year jump, clearly I'm going to say that.

26:11

John:So I've done a lot of video and I've done a lot of photos with it and I've been comparing

26:15

Vic:Mm-hm.

26:17

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

26:17

John:them in so like daylight, low light conditions, yeah, both video and still photos in both.

26:21

Vic:Oh.

26:23

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

26:26

John:And I've also been doing some spatial videos, which we'll talk about later on. But for the

26:32

Vic:Okay.

26:32

John:moment, I guess my, my, my thinking, my thoughts on the camera is I was, I was buying it mainly

26:34

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

26:41

John:for the ability to do zoomed in video so that I could take it into indoor sports without

26:46

John:having to sign the damn waiver saying, yeah, here's a blood sample, here's a DNA sample,

26:52

John:here's a whatever sample, you know, driver's license, sign your life away. So I can now

26:56

Vic:Mm-hm.

26:57

John:go into these games and not have to worry about any of that, which is great. And there's

26:58

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

27:00

Vic:Yeah.

27:02

Vic:I'm assuming we're talking about that new 5x lens.

27:02

John:plenty of other parents that do exactly what I do. Yes. Although for indoor, for indoor

27:06

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

27:08

John:basketball, unless I'm right down the other end of the court, 2X is fine of the other

27:13

John:end of the court and they're playing down the other end at the moment, then that's the

27:16

John:only time I'd need the 5X. 2X is generally enough when I'm doing video. So 5X is great

27:19

Vic:Mm.

27:21

Vic:That's cool.

27:23

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

27:24

John:for cricket. If I'm out in the boundary line, it gives passable video. It's not as good

27:29

John:obviously as 300 or 400 mil lenses that I've had in the past for my other camera, but it

27:35

Vic:Mm-hm.

27:35

John:is much nicer video in my opinion, because they, all of Apple's, I don't know, they do

27:37

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

27:46

John:a lot of video image processing and stuff. So they, they've got a lot of that. Whereas

27:47

Vic:Mm-hm.

27:49

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

27:51

John:I don't think that the Nikon is as good at it. So I don't know, I don't know how to describe

27:57

Vic:Mm-hm.

27:59

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

27:59

John:it, but 4K video out of my phone and 120 mil on the 5X is better than the equivalent out

28:05

John:of my Nikon. So take what you will from that. The flip side of it though, is the photos,

28:09

Vic:Mm-hm.

28:11

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

28:15

John:well they aren't. So in low light, in daylight conditions, it's not as, it's no contest in

28:21

Vic:Mm-hm.

28:23

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

28:25

John:daylight conditions. I could use either and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference.

28:30

John:So having the Nikon there with me is not going to get me that much better a photo than I

28:33

Vic:Yeah.

28:36

John:can take with my phone in good lighting conditions, which is great. But at nighttime, still photos

28:41

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

28:44

John:on the iPhone 15 are absolutely terrible of moving action. It's just, you don't even bother.

28:49

Vic:Right.

28:51

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

28:51

John:I tried it just to prove my point. There's just not enough light. It just, it just not

28:56

John:enough. It will not work. Yeah, if you stay still, that's fine. If you're moving, it will

28:57

Vic:Yeah. Vic:I think all of their algorithms and stuff focus on still photography for low light.

29:05

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

29:10

John:simply be terrible. So there is no substitute for having a camera, like an 85 millimeter

29:12

Vic:Right.

29:14

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

29:19

John:F 1.8 lens. You will not beat that or a 70 to 200 F 2.8 or F2 if you're good enough to

29:25

John:afford something like that. You cannot beat that if you're trying to take still photos

29:31

John:in low light conditions. So that still wins, but for video, it's fine. And I suspect the

29:32

Vic:Mm.

29:34

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

29:37

John:reason is because there's a lot of computational video going on in the background on the phone.

29:42

Vic:Mm.

29:43

John:So it'll probably comparing like previous frame to next frame and compensating for lighting

29:44

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

29:49

John:levels and you'd, and if you do it, yeah. And if you actually pause and try and extract

29:50

Vic:Right.

29:52

Vic:Just doing a lot of cleanup.

29:54

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

29:55

John:a frame, it's no better than an, a still photo. So it's a little bit mind bending, but because

30:01

John:you're, because it's moving video, the resolute, the sharpness of it is less apparent. So in

30:09

John:any case, I'm happy with it in that regard, but it will never replace my Nikon for still

30:15

John:photos in low light. It will never do it for sports, but that's okay. I kind of figured

30:19

Vic:Mm.

30:21

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

30:22

John:that going in. But other than that, it's been a fantastic phone. It's, it is a little bit

30:28

John:on the big and heavy side. The bigger screen has pluses and minuses. Obviously it's been

30:34

John:well discussed on many, many by many people, but I did it for the 5X camera and I don't

30:36

Vic:Mm-hm.

30:38

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

30:39

John:regret that choice. So that is now my phone for the next three years. And yeah, so there

30:44

John:you go. Any thoughts or questions? I do. I'm currently enjoying the USB-C for data transfer,

30:48

Vic:You got USB-C, too.

30:51

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

30:54

John:but I, what I want to do is I want to invest in a USB thumb drive. I have, but my problem

30:58

Vic:I was gonna say, have you tried the thing where you just basically offload your video directly to external storage yet?

31:05

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

31:06

John:is that none of my external drives have a fast enough write speed. They're all quite

31:10

John:old. I haven't bought a, an external drive recently. The only drive I bought recently

31:11

Vic:Gotcha.

31:13

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

31:15

John:is connected to my lightning node and I can't really disconnect that and use it cause that

31:18

Vic:Mm-hm.

31:20

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

31:21

John:will, then I'll lose all of my, I'll lose my, I'll lose my SATs. So I can't use that

31:26

John:one. So I need to buy another one. Yeah, man, don't lose your SATs. But look, I, I need

31:28

Vic:Don't wanna lose your sets.

31:30

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO] Vic:Yeah.

31:33

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

31:33

John:to go and buy one, but it's not just that simple because you also need to buy one that's

31:37

John:got the right shape. Cause the USB-C hole in the base of the, the case that I've got,

31:38

Vic:Mm.

31:40

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

31:45

Vic:Mm-hm.

31:46

John:it has an, it has like a certain shape to it. So if you don't get one that has a matching

31:47

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

31:51

John:shape, it won't fit. Yeah. Cause I tried, I've got a, I've got an adapter that does

31:52

Vic:Some of those are kind of a tight fit, aren't they?

31:55

Vic:Yeah.

31:57

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

31:58

John:USB-C to USB-A and it won't fit. Like it just won't fully insert when the case is on. And

32:02

Vic:Mm.

32:04

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

32:05

John:so I've been doing my research and everything. I just haven't taken the plunge yet. I need

32:08

John:a spare 60, 70 bucks. It's on the, it's on the wishlist, but not very high on the wishlist,

32:13

John:I guess. Alrighty. So we'll talk about special videos in a minute. Now I don't think I've

32:14

Vic:Right.

32:16

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

32:19

John:talked about my 3D adventures on this show with the, the, the Fujifilm FinePix Real 3D

32:26

John:camera. I talked about that on Is This The Show? So I just want to give a quick rundown

32:29

Vic:Mm.

32:31

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

32:32

John:of this. So in August last year, I bought myself a odd birthday present. I bought a,

32:38

John:a 3D camera, which was the most popular, highest rated 3D camera to date and like consumer

32:47

John:level. And this particular camera was notable for several reasons is it had a lenticular

32:52

John:display on the back. And it also allowed you to record video in 720p as well as take 3D

33:01

John:photos. And it's, it was a, it's a beautiful camera. And I, when I bought it, I got it

33:07

John:secondhand at a, at a, a pawn shop, I suppose you would say. Secondhand store, whatever

33:11

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

33:14

John:you want to call it. Cost me about 200 something. I think it was 200 bucks. I forget now, something

33:14

Vic:Mm-hm.

33:16

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

33:19

John:like that anyway. And I didn't notice it in the store, but the left hand lens sensor has

33:25

John:a single vertical row of pixels that's dead, which you can compensate for in post-production,

33:26

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

33:31

John:but it's just annoying. But what I was doing is I was trying to prove to myself that 3D

33:32

Vic:All right.

33:34

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

33:37

John:videos were worth the trouble and 3D videos as well. And my son had at the time an Oculus

33:44

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

33:44

John:Quest 2 and the Oculus Quest 2 now they prefer that it's called a MetaQuest because of course

33:49

John:Meta bought it, AKA Facebook, AKA Zucker, whatever. Mark Zuckerberg, anyway. And so he, they,

33:50

Vic:Mm.

33:52

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO] Vic:Mm-hm.

33:55

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

33:58

John:he basically said, "Here, borrow my head, my VR headset." And I wanted to test and see

34:03

John:whether or not it was actually worth it. So in order to convert the file formats on the

34:11

John:3D camera, the Fuji one, they do their own format called MPO for their video files and

34:15

Vic:Mm-hm.

34:17

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

34:18

John:such. And the JPEGs are actually, when you open them, you can't tell that they are in

34:22

John:fact 3D photos. So you had to convert them into the, the generic, what they call side

34:27

Vic:Mm-hm.

34:28

John:by side format. So you basically get two images, one on the left, one on the right. So it looks

34:29

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

34:32

John:like a big, long rectangle. And anyway, so what I learned and there, there's an app called

34:39

John:Stereo Photomaker. It's only runs on Windows, but you can run as a crossover app on your

34:44

John:Mac, which is what I did. But I tried a whole bunch of them and that was the one I preferred.

34:49

Vic:Mm-hm.

34:49

John:In any case, I converted all the Fuji photos across into side by side, loaded them into

34:51

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

34:54

John:this, this application on the, that I bought for the MetaQuest 2. And it's called Pegasus.

35:01

Vic:Mm-hm.

35:03

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

35:04

John:So I think Pegasus, but with the word pig instead of peg. Anyway, so yeah, it's weird,

35:06

Vic:Mm.

35:08

Vic:Did you put lipstick on it?

35:09

John:but I did not put lipsticks on my Pegasus. No, I did not. I probably could have, but

35:10

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

35:14

John:you know, nevermind. Anyway, so I found that video was pretty much almost a waste of time

35:16

Vic:Okay.

35:18

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

35:23

Vic:Mm.

35:23

John:on that thing. Cause the depth issue, like if you didn't have the subject right up close

35:25

Vic:Yeah.

35:27

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

35:28

John:to you and you're just taking 3D film of a scene in front of you, and there was like

35:34

John:a group of people that are playing cricket or they're just wandering around or doing

35:37

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

35:38

John:whatever, you lose that 3D effect. It's like, it's not very striking. It's not very compelling.

35:43

John:And when I took photos of an individual subject that was right up close to me, like within

35:44

Vic:Mm.

35:46

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

35:49

John:a few feet of the lens, that's when I'm like, whoa, this is, this is really impressive.

35:50

Vic:Mm-hm.

35:52

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

35:56

John:Like it is very, very impressive. But I was looking at it on MetaQuest 2 and the MetaQuest

36:02

Vic:Yeah.

36:03

John:2 does not have very good resolution at all. So I was really keen to see what it was like

36:04

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

36:08

John:a few months later when my son just, you know, basically caved in and bought himself a MetaQuest

36:13

John:3, which is a much newer, much higher resolution, much better headset, but still not as good

36:14

Vic:Mm.

36:16

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

36:21

John:as an Apple Vision Pro, but certainly very, very good. And then as a comparative, I then

36:28

John:loaded the same photos into the MetaQuest 3 and the ones that looked good on the MetaQuest

36:34

John:2 looked amazing on the MetaQuest 3. And I'm just like, okay, this is definitely something.

36:36

Vic:Yeah.

36:38

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

36:40

Vic:Yeah.

36:40

John:But the problem with this camera, yeah, I know. Oh, I know. Oh, it's awesome. I got

36:42

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

36:53

John:a hand-me-down of a MetaQuest 2 from my son. So that's the first time I've had a reverse

36:58

John:hand down. It's kind of cool. It's a hand-me-up. Anyway, so, so there's the, the, the thing

37:06

John:that's, the biggest problem I had with this camera was that the video it took was only

37:11

John:720p. And this camera was made in 2012, 2010. It had no real decent image stabilization

37:12

Vic:Mm-hm.

37:14

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

37:21

John:at all. The dynamic range was, was terrible. And unless you're in really good light, it

37:26

John:was, it was grainy. It took amazing 3D photos, still photos was fantastic. And the interpupillary

37:27

Vic:Mm.

37:29

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

37:33

John:distance, the gap between the lenses and such to match your pupils on the Fuji was 75 millimeters,

37:37

Vic:Mm-hm.

37:39

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

37:39

John:which was actually what's recommended because it'll, it'll essentially be more the average

37:42

Vic:Mm.

37:44

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

37:46

John:for a human being. So what you're seeing will be more representative. Unfortunately, yes,

37:49

Vic:Like the spacing between your eyes.

37:52

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

37:53

John:exactly. So in any case, I was itching once I got the, because that was one of the decisions

37:54

Vic:Yeah.

37:56

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

38:01

John:between getting the iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max was the ability to take spatial videos. So

38:06

Vic:Mm-hm.

38:08

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

38:08

John:let's now talk a little bit about that. So one of the reasons I wanted to do it is because

38:13

John:I wanted to continue taking spatial videos or what Apple calls spatial videos, 3D videos.

38:16

Vic:Mm-hm.

38:18

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

38:20

John:Now the, the iPhone 15 Pro or Pro Max, the, the IPD, the distance between the lenses is

38:26

John:only 20 millimeters, which is nearly a quarter of what that is on the Fuji. And I was highly

38:28

Vic:Mm-hm.

38:30

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

38:32

John:skeptical. I mean, very, very, very skeptical that this would actually produce an effective

38:38

John:3D, 3D effect. And on the, on the plus side, you know, it's integrated into a device that

38:43

Vic:Yeah.

38:45

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

38:49

John:I don't have to, that I'll be with me anyway, most of the time. So unlike the Fuji, which

38:53

John:I got to take with me and make sure I charge it and all that other good stuff, the phone

38:57

John:will be with me at all times. So, you know, the best camera being the camera that you've

39:01

John:got on you, figure, you know, that's a, that's a, that's a positive. So you can do these,

39:03

Vic:Right.

39:05

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

39:08

John:these on the Pro and the Pro Max. And I actually installed the public beta before it was formally

39:13

John:released back in late 2023. And there's an app called Spatialify. It's currently in test

39:21

John:flight and in iOS test flight, and you can convert your, your spatial video to side-by-side

39:28

John:format, and then you can view it in any VR headset on the market. So that's exactly what

39:32

John:I did. You can also adjust the eye distance in the app between 20 millimeters and 70 millimeters.

39:38

John:It defaults to 36. I haven't actually played too much with that and looked at the resulting

39:42

John:output, but I leaving it at the default of 36, the export looks fantastic and it's, it's

39:48

John:not an issue. So you can also support in half side-by-side, full side-by-side, which is

39:53

John:what I use, half over under and full over under, just different formats. But I ended

39:55

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

39:57

John:up using full side-by-side. It just worked best for the, for the Quest. Now, obviously

40:02

John:these videos on Apple Vision Pro, they aren't going to require anything like that. It'll

40:07

Vic:Right.

40:07

John:be fine as it is. So you don't need to worry about it. In any case. So yes. And the other

40:09

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

40:14

John:thing that got me that I, it didn't occur to me at the time, cause I assumed, Oh, it

40:19

John:records 4k video. So you'll be recording 4k, you know, spatial videos. Not true. They're

40:19

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

40:23

Vic:Mm-hm.

40:24

John:only 1080p at 30 frames a second, which yeah. And I initially I'm like, Oh, that's ridiculous.

40:25

Vic:I was gonna say, that's what I thought I remembered.

40:28

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

40:31

John:Maybe they'll, they'll, they're doing this in steps and I'll do it as a software update

40:34

John:down the road. But then I sat down and did the math and I'm like, Oh yeah, okay, now

40:38

John:I get it. So the problem is that the iPhone 15 Pro and Pro Max, that whilst it has three

40:45

John:lenses, only two of them are genuinely side-by-side. So whilst you can correct algorithmically for

40:48

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

40:53

John:having only 20 millimeters of IPD, it's more difficult in the vertical axis to correct

40:59

John:for it. So you're not going to use the zoom lens. So you end up using the one on the right

41:04

John:hand side. Well, when, when your phone lenses are pointing at the subject and the phone

41:09

John:screen is facing you, the one on the right hand side is the 48 megapixel, 24 millimeter

41:16

Vic:Right.

41:17

John:main camera. And the run on the left hand side is the ultra wide, which is only 12 megapixels.

41:18

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

41:23

John:So initially I thought, why? Well, you know, the one on the right hand side is 80, 64 by

41:28

John:60, 48 raw. And I scale it down, of course, unless you want the raw. But in any case,

41:34

John:the ultra wide is 40, 32 by 30, 24. So you would think that there is enough pixels there

41:38

Vic:Yeah.

41:40

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

41:40

John:to do 38, 40 by 21, 60, which is 4k. But what you've got to do is compensate for the fact

41:46

Vic:Mm-hm.

41:47

John:that the focal lengths are completely different. It's almost 50%. It's almost half. So the

41:48

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

41:53

John:ultra wide is 13 millimeters and the standard main is 24 millimeter effective. So that is

41:59

John:a problem. It means that basically you have to crop in on your 13 mil and that crop in

42:05

John:to meet, reach an equivalent of 24 millimeters is 2184 by 1638. So there's not enough vertical

42:14

Vic:Doesn't quite make it.

42:14

John:lines. No, you can't do 2160. You could interpolate, you could probably like do some weird computational

42:18

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

42:23

John:stuff, but the left hand side of it would be dodgy. So I think Apple just said, nah,

42:27

Vic:Mm-hm.

42:29

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

42:30

John:we'll just stick with 1920 by 1080. Now, the thing that got me though, when I was doing

42:31

Vic:Right.

42:33

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

42:36

John:all this investigation, Vic, and playing with it in the beta, I was like, oh, this video,

42:42

John:this is a cool thing, right? Because there's a little image, an icon of the Apple Vision

42:43

Vic:Mm-hm.

42:45

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

42:48

John:Pro and you can tap on that and it'll automatically default you into spatial video settings. But

42:54

John:you can only do that in video. You can't do that for a still photograph. And I'm like,

42:58

Vic:Really?

43:00

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

43:01

John:yeah, why? Why not? I mean, I can take a 3D photo with my, yeah, I know, I can take a

43:04

Vic:That's a bummer.

43:06

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

43:08

John:3D photo with my Fuji camera from 14 years old, 14 year old camera, and it looks great.

43:15

John:Why can't I do that with this camera? It's video only. Now, I don't know why, if I'm

43:22

John:missing something obvious, maybe I am, but I'm hoping that there'll be a software update.

43:28

Vic:It seems if they could get that pretty good for video,

43:32

Vic:then a still photo should be easier, I would think.

43:35

John:I would think too, and I don't get it. I suspect that it'll come down the road, but I just,

43:36

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

43:42

John:I don't get it. I don't get it. So maybe I'm missing something obvious. I don't think so.

43:47

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

43:48

John:So we'll see what happens with that. But most interested in this focus on what it can do,

43:54

John:which is the video. So as I said, my son purchased a MetaQuest 3, and again, the resolution is

43:56

Vic:Mm-hm.

43:58

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

44:01

John:fantastic. So I took and went through the same exercise, but unlike stereo photo maker,

44:08

John:Spotify is actually super easy to use. You basically just say, open up my photo library

44:14

John:and it'll show you all the photos that are spatial, I'm sorry, videos that are spatial,

44:18

John:and you just select one and choose the export format and away you go. I just put those onto

44:24

John:my Synology. So I load all of these, yeah, I load all my videos onto the Synology in

44:25

Vic:That's cool.

44:27

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

44:32

John:the control, you go into the control panel and you go to the media indexing and you re-index

44:36

John:the video folder. And then it magically shows up in the DLNA UPnP folder in Pegasus. And

44:44

Vic:Mm-hm.

44:46

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

44:46

John:then you can just look at the videos. So honestly, I got, I was saying I crept up on my son.

44:54

John:So my son was cooking something in the kitchen and I walked up to him taking a spatial video

44:56

Vic:[LAUGH]

45:00

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

45:00

John:and I was getting close to him and he had the spatula and he was all, the egg flipper,

45:04

John:I should say. And he was, you know, he had the flip of thing anyway. And I said, Oh,

45:10

John:Hey, Hey Ben, I'm trying the spatial video thing. And he gets the spatula and he comes

45:14

John:up and he's waving it right in front of my face. And I'm like, Whoa, Whoa, Whoa. You

45:18

Vic:Mm-hm.

45:20

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

45:20

John:know, okay, let's just, you know, back off. It's all good, mate. Anyway. So then I go

45:24

John:and put that video in the MetaQuest 3 and I'm watching it and it pops in my face so

45:30

John:much. It felt very much like, you know, my son was essentially going to whack me in the

45:35

John:face with the flipper. And so it was mind-blowingly impressive. It was seriously, honestly, and

45:37

Vic:[LAUGH]

45:41

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

45:45

John:because it was 1080p and it was on a MetaQuest 3, the quality was exceptionally good. And

45:52

Vic:That's cool.

45:53

John:it's more, yeah, it's more or less at that point where I'm like, I may not get one immediately,

45:54

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

45:59

John:but I know I will eventually get an Apple Vision Pro because it will look even more

46:03

John:amazing. I have no doubt about that. It's just, wow. You know? So, but the same learnings

46:06

Vic:Mm-hm.

46:08

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

46:11

John:from the Fujifilm apply here because the laws of physics are the laws of physics. Like you

46:15

John:need to get close enough to the subject such that that extra eye view gets depth perception.

46:21

John:The further away you go, trigonometry tells you the angle gets too low. Yeah. And you

46:25

Vic:You lose that.

46:26

John:lose that depth. And there's just nothing you can do about it. It's just physics. So

46:27

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

46:31

John:honestly, Vic, I'm thoroughly impressed. But the questions I have, well, that's what I

46:37

Vic:I wonder if they'll ever start putting a camera lens on each end of the phone for that.

46:41

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

46:41

John:thought they would do. And we talked about this a month ago, maybe even a year ago. And

46:44

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

46:45

John:I said that it was inevitable that they were going to introduce 3D video recording and

46:50

John:photo photography on iPhones to make people want an Apple Vision Pro, which is exactly

46:56

John:what they did. I mean, I'm not claiming that was like, oh, hey, I predicted the future

47:00

John:because it was so bleedingly obvious if you didn't see that and you just weren't thinking

47:04

John:about it. But the problem is that what I got wrong is, well, why didn't they do that for

47:05

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

47:09

John:still photos? And the other thing is, why only 1080p? So, and I'm stunned when they

47:13

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

47:16

John:put those lenses so close together, because clearly what they're doing is they've said,

47:20

John:well, we want our lenses in a lens cluster and we'll just compute our way out of it.

47:26

John:So I think that if you were to have them on extreme ends of the phone, I think it would

47:26

Vic:Mm, yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

47:33

John:actually give you slightly better 3D representation. But maybe they just figured in all of their

47:39

John:testing that computationally they can adjust the IPD and they get information that's good

47:45

John:enough. I don't think computation can solve the problem because it's like the whole, if

47:46

Vic:Yeah, well. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

47:50

John:you close your left eye and then you close your right eye, you will see different information

47:53

John:because different light from a different angle is hitting the 3D, coming off the 3D object

47:57

John:you're looking at. You can't fake that. You can't. Yeah. So, you know what I mean? It's

47:58

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

48:03

Vic:Right. John:like, it's, yeah, it's never going to be quite as good, but you know what? Irrespective,

48:04

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

48:09

John:I was, yeah, I know, right. It'll be uneven, uneven, I tell you. Bottom line is that I

48:10

Vic:But the ugliness of two camera bumps, John.

48:13

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

48:20

John:am absolutely pumped, excited about the Apple Vision Pro just for this feature alone. And

48:23

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

48:28

John:I know that there's so much more that it can do, but for me, this is its killer feature.

48:33

John:It always was. I just needed to satisfy myself that it was worth it. And I think it is, even

48:34

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

48:39

John:though I haven't tried Apple Vision Pro yet, I know that the step up from the Quest 2 to

48:39

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

48:43

John:the Quest 3 was massive. And the step up from the Quest 3 to the Apple Vision Pro, reportedly

48:49

John:by people that have used it, is a step up again. So I have no doubt whatsoever that

48:54

John:one of these is in my future. I just don't know how far down the road and which kidney

48:57

John:I'm selling. But anyway. I could, yeah, I could do that too. It's only a question of

48:59

Vic:[LAUGH]

49:01

Vic:Thought you were gonna say which kid you're selling first.

49:05

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

49:07

Vic:Hm. John:which is more painful. And I'm like, hmm, maybe selling the kid is less painful. We'll

49:08

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

49:13

Vic:The one of mine, yeah.

49:15

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

49:16

John:see. Dear me. But anyway, so I guess we can talk a little bit also about the, because

49:24

John:when I was doing the notes for this, the Apple Vision Pro had not actually been released

49:29

Vic:Right.

49:29

John:yet for sale. Now it's up for sale. Yeah, that's right. Have you had a chance to have

49:31

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

49:36

John:a look through the updated website? Why is Scott convinced you'll buy it? That is, do

49:38

Vic:No, not really. Vic:I actually don't have a ton of interest in this product.

49:43

Vic:Although, Scott is convinced I'm going to buy one, but I don't really have a ton of interest in it.

49:48

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

49:50

Vic:Because I buy everything Apple makes.

49:52

Vic:[LAUGH]

49:55

John:you have a Pro Display XDR? Do you have a Mac Pro? Anyway, rather than Scott not be

49:58

Vic:I do not. Vic:I actually have a lot of things Apple makes I don't have.

50:03

Vic:I do not. Vic:[LAUGH]

50:05

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

50:07

John:in the room to defend himself, I'm sure he has his reasons for thinking this. But irrespective,

50:13

John:I went on the website yesterday and had a bit of a scour through it. And they've got

50:18

Vic:Mm. John:a couple of videos up there, like the making of it, which is always fun to watch the making

50:19

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

50:22

John:of videos. And so the making of this thing is like, oh, cool, that's how they do that.

50:26

John:And oh, wow, that seems excessive and over the top, but whatever. And yeah, so a little

50:29

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

50:32

John:minute and a half thing about the making of the Apple Vision Pro, and it all looks very

50:35

John:cool. But the one that's also interesting is there's a seven, eight, nine minute video,

50:41

John:I forget what it is. It's like introducing Apple Vision Pro. And it's supposedly the

50:46

John:first time this person has used it. So there's, I forget her name, Alexandra or something

50:50

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

50:52

John:like that, whatever her name is, introducing it to this guy. And this guy apparently never

50:58

John:used it before. And so she's like, well, you look at this and you do that and you do this

51:00

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

51:02

John:and you do that. And it's a bit cringy, but it kind of gets the point across. Because

51:08

John:I had wondered, well, how do you adjust the screen size? How do you move the windows around?

51:14

Vic:Mm-hm. John:And it's like, okay, so you look at the corner and then the control will magically appear

51:15

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

51:20

John:and then you pinch and grab it as you're looking at it. And then you can drag to increase the

51:24

John:size of whatever. And it's like little details like this that aren't obvious from the previous

51:25

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

51:29

John:videos at WWDC, they walk through some of those basics. So that'll definitely help when

51:34

John:people go to use this thing and understanding how to use it.

51:38

Vic:Mm-hm. John:So that was good. I watched that whole thing twice just to get my head around it and it

51:39

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

51:45

John:all looks pretty good. But yeah, going through the order page. So there's three models. You

51:50

John:can get a 256 gig, 512 gig and one terabyte model. Obviously each model as you go up has

51:54

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

51:57

John:a new insane step up in price because Apple storage rip off, blah, blah, blah. Of course,

52:04

Vic:Right. Vic:[LAUGH]

52:07

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

52:08

John:of course. I mean, they're consistent, they're consistent and no, I'm not going to get anything

52:11

John:more than a 256 gig. You gotta be kidding me. I don't care. I will cycle through stuff

52:16

John:before I pay those prices. Thank you very much. Anyway. So the other, I don't have a

52:18

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

52:22

Vic:Just curious, what is the one terabyte?

52:25

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

52:26

John:lot of stuff in front of me, but, and yeah. You may have to scan your face. It won't let

52:27

Vic:Hold on a second, I'm looking.

52:29

Vic:Get started.

52:31

Vic:I'll grab an iPhone. Vic:I don't want to grab an iPhone to find the right.

52:34

Vic:I, no, I don't want to scan my face.

52:36

Vic:I can't. Vic:Mm.

52:38

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO] John:you. So this is the thing, right? Is that, so when you do this, there's an app clip.

52:39

Vic:Wait, wait, wait, one terabyte, 38.99.

52:43

Vic:Jeez. Vic:[LAUGH]

52:46

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

52:48

Vic:I think that's a better, better price than the laptops.

52:53

Vic:34.99, 36.99, and 38.99.

52:53

John:It is, but it's still not worth it. We can buy one terabyte solid state drive for under

52:58

Vic:But I agree, it's not worth it.

53:00

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

53:03

Vic:I, yeah, I know.

53:03

John:a hundred bucks. Please, you know, no, just no. Anyway. All right. So the, yeah, what

53:05

Vic:[LAUGH]

53:07

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

53:10

John:was I going to say? Yeah, right. So the, the Apple vision pro website, when you log into

53:15

John:on Apple, when you go to the Apple website, there's an app clip. And so you hold your

53:19

John:phone up to the app clip. It downloads this app clip, and then it just scans your face.

53:24

John:And it's very analogous. If you've got a phone has to have face ID. If you've done the face

53:29

John:ID set up, that's all it is. It's effectively the same kind of thing. And you just got to

53:33

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

53:34

John:move your head around in a couple of times. And it says, yep, I got your face. And I was

53:38

John:like, great, please don't do anything dodgy with that. And Apple says, yep, we've picked

53:42

John:your light shield. And they're not going to tell you what the hell the light shield is,

53:44

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

53:46

John:but you know, just trust us, you know, good one. Great. Anyway. So once you've done that,

53:52

John:then you go through and you select the option that you want. And then you can talk about

53:55

John:your lenses. Now, the thing that's interesting is that they say very clearly in there that

54:00

John:the Zeiss inserts will not work if you have a prism setting on your lens and your glasses

54:07

John:prescription. Now, unfortunately for me, I lost my, it, yeah, the, the problem is it's,

54:09

Vic:What does that mean? Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

54:15

John:I think it's a barrel correction for barrel distortion. So I didn't have time to look

54:17

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

54:21

John:into this before the show, cause I only went up, you know, I only looked at this yesterday,

54:24

John:but and I was busy yesterday, but yeah, at this stage, my understanding is if you've

54:26

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

54:29

John:got multifocal lenses, it's probably going to be an issue. If you wear glasses for distance

54:36

John:viewing or for reading, it's not a problem, but if you've got multifocals, it's going

54:40

John:to be an issue. So they basically said, if you've got a prism value, then you basically,

54:44

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

54:46

John:you can't get a lens for it. Sorry. So I don't know the jury's out as to how this is going

54:48

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

54:53

John:to work. Correct. Yeah. So Syracuse's eyes rather like mine we have two scripts, one

54:54

Vic:This is like where Syracuse was talking about,

54:57

Vic:which of my prescriptions do I need?

54:59

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

55:05

John:for distance viewing and one for up close, or in his case, one for computer work which,

55:09

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

55:10

John:you know, so the way that a lot of people with this condition, you know, which is just

55:15

John:called getting old, I guess everybody, oh dear, it's an inevitable condition for most

55:17

Vic:[LAUGH]

55:22

Vic:It's a condition we all have.

55:24

Vic:[LAUGH]

55:29

John:of us, you know? Oh my God. Anyway, nevermind. Nevermind at all. Anyhow. Yeah. Anyway. So

55:33

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

55:37

John:yeah, we, so you can get contact lenses for your distance vision correction, and then

55:43

John:when you want to do reading up close, you can then put just normal readers that you'll

55:47

John:buy at the chemist or drug store and put them over the top. And that's what I did there

55:52

John:for a while. But what I don't understand is, is that therefore a viable solution if you're

55:54

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

55:59

John:wearing the Apple Vision Pro? Like would you wear contacts for distance viewing and then

56:03

John:get the readers inserts, which are only a hundred bucks US versus the prescription,

56:05

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

56:08

John:you know, 149s. But I'm just, like I said, I need to understand, and other people will

56:14

John:figure this out. And this is one of those few things that I'm grateful that it's launching

56:17

John:in the States before it's launching here. Cause I, the Americans, you're all going to

56:22

John:be guinea pigs for me and you're going to figure this stuff out. So I'll just sit back

56:26

John:and watch and let you work through the detail. Okay. And then once you've figured all that

56:28

Vic:[LAUGH]

56:30

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

56:31

John:out, I'll be like, aha, now I know I need to do. So anyway, I do need to get new glasses.

56:36

John:These ones are getting close to three years old. So I looked at the script the other day

56:39

John:and these lenses are scratched up to hell and I need new ones. So this time I'll be

56:40

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

56:44

John:a little bit more careful about it, but I'd like to go in there and say, oh, you know,

56:48

John:I need a copy of my prescription because last time I, they give you one when you buy the

56:51

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

56:53

John:glasses, but I've can't find it. It's, it's gone somewhere. So I need to get that again.

56:59

John:So while I will ask them these questions once I know, cause I mean, it may well be that

57:05

John:if you need two different kinds of lenses, the only way to do it is like I say, pop on

57:09

John:contact lenses and then get the readers inserts and then you've got the full range of vision.

57:14

Vic:Right. John:Otherwise it might just be that it's tuned for up close. It might be tuned for distance.

57:15

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

57:18

John:I don't know. It depends on how they've engineered it. Anyway. So yeah, finally exciting. So

57:22

Vic:Yeah. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

57:25

John:they'll, they'll be available on the 2nd of February, which will be probably about a week

57:29

John:after this episode goes live. And yes, to all the guinea pigs out there, let me know

57:32

Vic:Mm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

57:34

John:how it goes. Vic:Okay. John:Yeah.

57:36

Vic:I won't be one of them. Vic:My only interest in it really is honestly, I'd like to watch TV.

57:42

Vic:[LAUGH]

57:44

Vic:But I'm also pretty fond of my actual real Dolby Atmos surround sound system.

57:45

John:Yeah.

57:49

Vic:And spatial audio and AirPods and stuff is really nice, but

57:53

Vic:it's just not gonna compete with that.

57:55

Vic:And also there's a $3,500 price tag to watch TV with it.

57:59

Vic:[LAUGH]

58:01

Vic:And then using it as an external display for my MacBook Pro would be really nice too.

58:01

John:Yeah, yeah, exactly. Indeed. See the other thing to keep in mind too, Vic, is that if

58:05

Vic:But again, $3,500 price tag on it.

58:09

Vic:It really kind of curbs my enthusiasm for this product.

58:13

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

58:19

John:you want to have a, a private experience, you need your AirPods. And then what I, so

58:23

Vic:Mm-hm. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

58:24

John:what I had is a situation where I, my son's AirPods met the dryer. And so I bought new

58:30

John:AirPods pro and gave him my old ones. Anyway. I did that two months before they released

58:33

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

58:39

John:the USB-C version. Now I don't, there was nothing on the specs for the AirPods pro USB-C

58:44

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

58:47

John:version that jumped out at anybody as them being different. They were just a USB-C charging

58:52

John:case. Everyone just like shrugged. Let's, you know, nothing to see here. Turns out they

58:56

John:put in five gigahertz into the damn AirPods. And that's what the Vision Pro will use for

59:02

John:low latency audio. And I'm like, so I missed out on those AirPods by two months. I'm not,

59:05

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

59:10

John:not that I knew I needed to wait. So it's like, if I want to have that kind of an experience,

59:14

John:if I do get an Apple Vision Pro, I'm up for another set of fricking AirPods. Yay. So that's

59:20

John:annoying. John:Yeah. The second gen of the second gen. Yeah, exactly. Don't call it the third gen. Aye

59:21

Vic:Yeah, this is the discreetly labeled second gen, second gen.

59:26

Vic:[LAUGH]

59:28

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

59:32

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

59:33

John:yai yai. Anyway. All right. So if you want to talk more about this, you can reach me

59:37

John:on the Fediverse at [email protected] or the network at [email protected]. If

59:44

John:you're enjoying Pragmatic and you'd like to support us and keep the show ad free, you

59:47

John:can by becoming a premium supporter. Just visit engineer.network/pragmatic to learn

59:52

John:how you can help this show to continue to be made. Thank you. A big thank you to all

59:57

John:of our supporters. A special thank you to our silver producers, Mitch Bilger, Shane

1:00:01

John:O'Neill, Lesley, Kellen Fredelius Fujimoto, Jared Roman, Joel Maher, Katarina Will, Chad

1:00:06

John:Juring and Ian Gallagher. And an extra special thank you to our gold producer, Stephen Bridle

1:00:11

John:and our gold producer known only as R. Pragmatic is a podcasting 2.0 enhanced show and with

1:00:18

John:the right podcast player, you'll have episode locations, enhanced chapters and real time

1:00:23

John:subtitles on selected episodes. And you can also stream sats and boost with messages if

1:00:28

John:you like. There's details on how along with the Boostergram leaderboard for this and all

1:00:33

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:00:33

John:the shows on our website. If you'd like to get in touch with Vic, what's the best way

1:00:37

John:for them to get in touch with you, mate? Vic:You can find me in most places at Big Hudson 1.

1:00:39

John:There you go. I cringe every time I hear that domain. But anyway. Yeah.

1:00:42

Vic:I still have a Twitter/X account, although it doesn't get a lot of use.

1:00:47

Vic:And you can find me on the Fediverse as Big Hudson 1 at, no wait,

1:00:53

Vic:Big Hudson 1 at app.net, that's it.

1:00:58

Vic:Yeah, app.net. Vic:[LAUGH]

1:01:02

Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:01:07

Vic:Right. Vic:[BLANK_AUDIO]

1:01:08

John:Yeah, I know. That's all good. Well, a special thank you to our supporters and a big thank

1:01:13

John:you to everyone for listening. And as always, thank you, Vic. It's always a good time having

1:01:18

Vic:Yes, thank you for having me.

1:01:21

Vic:I had a good time as well.

Rate

Join Podchaser to...

  • Rate podcasts and episodes
  • Follow podcasts and creators
  • Create podcast and episode lists
  • & much more

Episode Tags

Do you host or manage this podcast?
Claim and edit this page to your liking.
,

Unlock more with Podchaser Pro

  • Audience Insights
  • Contact Information
  • Demographics
  • Charts
  • Sponsor History
  • and More!
Pro Features