YouTube CRUSHES Logan Paul - WAN Show Feb. 9 2018

Linus Tech Tips ·Linus Tech Tips ·2018-05-06 · 11,716 words · ~58 min read
Floatplane YouTube

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0:13 yeah our obs is still super duper broken
0:18 but it seems like our audio levels are okay
0:22 yeah so i think we are in pretty good shape to just
0:25 just power on through there and the live
0:28 chat is amazed that we're on time
0:32 there's there's even some expletives that's how surprised they are
0:36 you know who you have to thank for us being on time today
0:41 who do we give credit samsung Colton oh
0:45 both let's give both samsung and Colton credit so we've got a lot of great
0:49 topics for you guys today t-mobile was sued after uh cryptocurrency theft yep
0:56 office 2019 is only going to run on Windows 10 apparently no
1:02 although does this one include could you be slightly less of a hater
1:06 i'm so worried like would it actually kill you that my office from 2010 is
1:10 still going to work it could be everything that is less of a hater that's so unfortunate that it's going to
1:15 be totally fine apple suffered a significant source code leak
1:19 and Intel is uh they've got this vaughn project
1:23 that's like smart glasses but like smarter than previous glasses but like
1:28 super smart but not that like techie but like there's a lot of tech in them but
1:32 like you won't see it yeah and uh anyway we'll get to that and the show today is
1:36 brought to you by
1:40 super ultra wide gaming whoa
1:43 let's roll that intro do you think the intro will work i mean we're on time could the intro really work on the same
1:48 day that we're on i believe yeah
1:52 it's amazing it's almost like we had
1:55 Colton down here fixing everything before we started
2:09 oops i'm trying to type http colon slash now it's all like http colon colon slash
2:14 that wouldn't work why do you even write the whole thing
2:18 out because then it automatically hyperlinks and oh what did i just do
2:21 what just happened no it's fine everything's fine
2:27 for those of you who aren't already playing WAN Show bingo
2:31 now would probably be a good time to start i wonder i wonder if they already
2:35 have luke laughs annoyingly loud that seems to be a pretty that's like a free
2:39 score maybe yeah that should just be the middle square the freebie middle squares
2:43 that were late is it really i'm pretty sure no
2:48 oh wow so it's going to be a lot harder to get absolutely wrecked everyone owned
2:54 oh man i feel like i only talked to you during rancho we didn't even manage to
2:59 do lunch this week no but we're doing dinner on sunday are we oh fun don't
3:03 forget that right that's important you need to be there
3:10 look i go places when i'm supposed to be at them
3:14 i'm just making sure can i be late probably okay
3:19 now everything will be fine then we don't have a problem then we'll
3:24 be there bud that's a good call
3:27 um so yeah this is this is really cool i will actually be meeting for the first
3:32 time in person and some of them even digitally the team that has been working
3:37 on Floatplane which technically i'm like sort of in charge of
3:42 on sunday yeah and it's going to be super exciting because we are getting to
3:46 the point now where everyone is still frantically working on getting this
3:50 thing going do you know how many messages i have gotten about people like cody's
3:55 lab having their channels disabled yeah
3:58 and just like generally people expressing frustration with youtube yeah
4:02 and being like yo like are you guys still working on flow
4:06 plane like are you guys going to let other creators on the platform because this seems like it would be a good thing
4:10 for the creators we know we're on it we're trying i will say this
4:14 for the people that are already subscribed there will be something very
4:17 cool posted on the 28th oh really
4:21 in text form in text form on the site what are you
4:25 even talking about i'm gonna announce the thing and tell them they can go use
4:29 it oh oh cool okay but it's just gonna be for
4:33 like them and stuff so so yeah so i've um yeah believe it or not i'm already in
4:38 touch with cody um and we've we've
4:41 chatted about things and apparently the problem this time um i
4:46 was watching his video the problem this time was his video where he shows how
4:50 you can make your own gunpowder by
4:54 um i don't know what the process is called because i'm not nearly as
4:57 sciencey as cody so i apologize and it's just that's very sciencey dude i like
5:01 this stuff but like uh um
5:05 i don't know it wouldn't be like distilling because you're just taking
5:08 like the leftover sediment i think whatever something
5:11 he took his own pee and left it for like 18 months and then
5:16 extracted the nitrates from it in some way and made gunpowder which is amazing
5:22 but technically explosives manufacturing
5:29 but ah i don't i've always been up for years yeah
5:34 and like i kind of have a soft spot for like sciency stuff yeah cause like if
5:38 you had a science textbook from school
5:41 you're going to be able to figure that kind of stuff i'm like look he's in america
5:45 what what he did was no more like what he manufactured
5:49 was no more dangerous than what you could get by hitting a screecharoo with
5:54 a hammer and dumping the contents out onto the table or just going to walmart
5:59 and buying it i bet you can just buy it at walmart gunpowder i doubt it but you
6:03 can get it for oh but you could just buy like refilling i guess uh oh can you
6:07 just buy gunpowder i don't know if you can i know you can just buy it i don't know if you can just buy it from walmart
6:11 buy gun powder walmart this video is not gonna
6:15 be monetized um reloading walmart yeah
6:18 but it's probably black powder black powder really which i don't think
6:22 is technically gun powder i don't know if it would be
6:25 black powder because i think gunpowder is technically white powder i mean black
6:29 powder rifles are like i am not yeah so we've got uh hops number nine black
6:33 powder gun bore cleaner and patch lubricant
6:36 um we got a powder coated thing no i don't know i don't think they sell okay
6:39 okay um they've got cleaning cleaning stuff for black powder i think black
6:42 powder is fair a fair bit easier to obtain i don't remember exactly what the
6:46 difference is it still goes boom something matters it
6:49 does go boom but in a different way yeah in a different way um
6:53 so anyway we've had a lot of people contacting us about it right so where
6:57 was i going with this um
7:00 yeah right right right so it's technically explosives manufacturing but in the same
7:06 sense that when i crossed the border and didn't declare the fire shut up
7:13 the black cats and i forget what else i had but i had
7:18 like honestly the sticks are like this big so
7:22 in the same sense that i was technically
7:25 transporting explosives across the border
7:29 which canadian border services was not
7:32 less stoked on as canadian border services
7:36 tend to call it when they are le stokes
7:39 yeah we are not less stoked um
7:44 like it is yeah
7:47 but it's also not because it's like not dangerous like you
7:52 could you could have a black cat go off on your hand and it'd be like ow
7:56 crap that was dumb but i'm fine they're a little bit stronger than like an
8:00 individual mighty mite like come on
8:05 why are they illegal in canada this was my form of protest okay
8:12 i was protesting samsung is not going to be impressed
8:16 with this show that they're tuning into at this point Colton's like
8:19 you guys you guys samsung's watching the show
8:26 but that's okay that's okay this was my form of protest okay yeah um
8:31 and i they were like you know we can keep your car right
8:37 and back then my car was worth at least a few hundred dollars
8:43 and i legitimately couldn't afford to just
8:46 like replace it yeah yeah whereas now the replacement cost on my car would be
8:51 significantly lower than that yeah um
8:55 so i was like oh really i could actually have you ever felt the blood running out
8:59 of your face yeah yeah yeah and i can completely imagine how in that moment
9:03 that would happen i felt the blood drain out of my face and it was not a
9:09 good thing okay it was not a good thing to be fair
9:12 usually in moments like that for me it's the opposite i usually feel just like
9:15 you go flush yeah interesting okay so i'll get that with
9:19 anger but not with fear
9:22 i think yeah i think my response is usually similar okay
9:26 yeah so for me the fear response is the is the blanching i think it's called
9:31 blanching um sure and then the angry response i'll get like the like the
9:35 headache like the throbby head it's the only one
9:39 it's like i don't get scared i'm just kidding
9:44 well i think you clapped for twenty years
9:48 part of the response though is part of that is uh flea right
9:51 fight or flight what what i never realized
9:56 that one of your defining characteristics is a loud obnoxious
10:01 laugh yes and your handle is laffer is your name
10:06 abbreviated to laugh yeah was that
10:09 because your gaming buddies hated your laugh in their microphone ears it is
10:13 literally partially that wow also because that's just my last name short
10:19 right but that's that's the double entendre yes yes
10:23 you know what you know what sorry samsung we're ending
10:27 the show now because that's enough that's enough knowledge
10:30 bombs for one win show forget it i'm done
10:35 the whole chat is just like wow wow
10:40 can you tell there's no news this
10:44 week um actually you know what we we do have something really important okay
10:49 let's actually do a news topic yeah the greatest news the most important news
10:53 yeah um this is actually kind of a big deal um so i don't actually know if this
10:57 is in the dock but this is right off of the creator blog um so the source for
11:01 this news topic is actually uh our youtube rep who was like
11:06 so can you post it in the chat you should
11:10 probably be aware of this at some point um i think we're at five no no it's not
11:16 it wasn't like that it was just like you should know what's going on you guys should know what's going on because hey
11:20 we're trying to do a better job of communicating with creators and be more
11:25 transparent and all that stuff and like it's you know it's really cool that we
11:28 have a creator rep now because for a long time even when i thought we were
11:32 kind of big enough to justify one we didn't but we do
11:36 so you know honestly i'm gonna read big chunks of this at a time because you
11:41 guys probably aren't going to go off and read it and the message is really really
11:45 important so the title of the article on the blog is
11:49 preventing harm to the broader youtube community because honestly
11:54 a lot of the reaction to some of the creators recently whether we're talking
11:59 spider-man and elsa crap
12:02 or whether we're talking about you know people who are promoting hate or whether
12:07 we're talking about people who are creating um
12:11 content that is culturally insensitive and just straight inappropriate
12:16 there has been there have been a lot of reactions from
12:20 youtubers that honestly i have to confess i never felt this way
12:24 i never really felt like i was being lumped in and did you
12:30 no i think we've had a pretty good
12:34 like reaction so i never felt like i was being lumped in with
12:39 with destructive we do creators with tech youtube
12:44 that's true but we are sectioned off i got referred to as a tech bro yeah for
12:48 the first time actually a couple of weeks ago and that was enlightening for
12:52 me because i'd never heard the term before apparently i haven't heard tech bro but i do know that we're in the tech
12:56 side okay we are fairly segmented so so we don't really feel any way like we get
13:01 lumped in with the broader youtuber community but there were a lot of
13:05 reactions from people going like whoa whoa whoa hey hold on a second um
13:12 you know i'm getting a lot of vitriol i'm getting a lot of negative feedback
13:15 here yo not all youtubers are willing to or
13:20 or feel like it's right to to play this game where it's all about the shock
13:25 value for views yeah like in fact a lot of us really want nothing
13:30 to do with that please do not lump us in
13:34 but the reality of it is is that as soon as whether it's a really dangerous or a
13:40 really hurtful prank or whether it is something like the
13:44 incident in japan when that kind of stuff hits the
13:48 mainstream media and i mean mainstream media not as like
13:52 a derogatory term i mean like tv when it
13:55 hits people who don't live and breathe
13:58 online video content like we do i can see how people might generalize oh
14:04 it's another youtuber in the news it's easy to do that doing something stupid
14:09 it's easy for views and for money yeah right
14:12 so i get that and so ultimately this is
14:15 this is youtube's reaction to this um
14:19 recently we faced situations situations
14:22 like this is not an isolated incident so they had to do something where the
14:25 egregious actions of a handful of youtubers harmed the reputation of the
14:29 broader creator community among advertisers the media industry and most
14:33 importantly the general public and in light of this behavior and our commitment to tighten our policies and
14:38 communicate them more quickly and transparently double thumbs up for me for that thank
14:42 you that sounds good we're introducing new consequences to apply in the rare
14:47 event when one creator's actions harm the entire community because in the past
14:51 pretty much all they could do was issue a strike for a copyright violation or a
14:56 violation of the community guidelines or they would pull the monetization
15:01 usually just from an individual video where something got reported and was
15:06 reviewed by a human and found or even not reviewed by a human for the last
15:09 little bit that's been a whole other fiasco um and they would pull the
15:12 monetization but usually just from one video so now they're saying when one
15:16 creator does something particularly blatant like a heinous prank where
15:20 people are traumatized or they promote violence or hate or demonstrate cruelty
15:24 or sensationalize the pain of others in an attempt to gain views or subscribers
15:28 that can cause lasting damage to the community including viewers creators in
15:32 the outside world so they're saying that's why they want to make sure that
15:36 the actions of a few don't impact the 99.9 percent who use their channels to
15:40 connect with fans and build a thriving business yeah and
15:44 even though i didn't think about it initially as us being lumped in with you
15:48 know other youtubers you know in much the same way that you know a talk show
15:52 host might not necessarily have gone oh because you know back in the back in the
15:56 early 2000s when tom green was kind of running around yeah doing crazy stuff or
16:00 you know you look at you know guys like van margara from uh he joined jackass at
16:05 some point i think i knew him when he was cky or something like that before
16:08 yeah yeah i don't know whatever their their group was called before that one of my friends had it was a vhs
16:15 anyway one of my friends had one of their tapes and i had kind of watched it
16:18 and going okay i guess you're into that that's cool i've never really got into it but um
16:23 anyway the point is like i can see like
16:27 while some other talk show host might not have gone oh i'm at risk of being
16:30 grouped in that doesn't necessarily fly with
16:33 youtube and it did seem to be happening so you know i'm glad as one of the 99.9
16:38 percent who do use our channel i feel like
16:41 constructively i'm glad that they are doing this
16:45 so here is the stick that they're brandishing because
16:49 ultimately it's not like any of these community guidelines or advertiser
16:53 friendly guidelines for monetization are new it's just that they didn't really
16:57 have like a like a thing they were gonna hit you
17:01 with if you didn't adhere to them
17:04 yes i'm sorry that was probably terrible my bad
17:08 so number one
17:12 premium monetization programs promotion and content development partnerships
17:17 so they may remove a channel from google preferred and also suspend cancel or
17:22 remove a creator's youtube original and that's something that they already did
17:27 as a reaction to one of the recent occurrences people argued they didn't do
17:30 it fast enough but i am personally of the mind that
17:35 doing the right thing eventually
17:38 is still good and we're not talking they didn't do it
17:42 fast enough like they finished the entire season
17:46 and shipped the whole thing and then just like didn't renew it like
17:50 they cancelled it so it took them a few days and like they could have done
17:54 better but you got to understand too a company like google is a big ship like
17:59 when you are trying to make a decision like
18:02 giving the boot to one of your top creators it's
18:06 there's multiple people maybe people are like traveling when the whole thing goes
18:09 down and they get to like get back to the office to talk about this i know
18:13 you're being vague for a point but you even lost me slightly here in terms of
18:17 like which which program was canceled logan paul his youtube red i didn't even
18:21 know he had one yeah okay yeah cool okay okay
18:25 number two i had no idea i thought you were talking
18:28 about when it happened to pewdiepie i was like not all this completely lines up no okay monetization and creator
18:34 support privileges we may suspend a channel's ability to serve ads all
18:38 together not just on the video their ability to earn revenue
18:42 and potentially remove a channel from the youtube partner program outright
18:46 including creator support and access to youtube spaces
18:50 number three video recommendations
18:54 this those other two are like huge those are
18:57 those are whatever like they're yes they they're meaningful but like really
19:02 youtube spaces what were there like three they saved the most important one
19:06 for last yeah they saved the most this this one i would have put this one first
19:09 if i was like trying to make a point yeah holy crap this is a big deal
19:13 video recommendations we may remove a
19:16 channel's eligibility to be recommended
19:19 on youtube such as appearing on the home page trending tab or watch
19:25 next that's like you're done whoa
19:29 like that is basically
19:32 a shadow ban would be the closest parallel it like not directly but
19:38 sort of there the amount of people that go directly to people's channels to watch
19:42 videos is low even if you're like oh i do that you're probably in the more
19:46 hardcore of audiences it it doesn't happen that much the the
19:51 other thing too is that especially as you as you okay
19:56 so to the lay person the average person a big subscriber number seems really
20:01 important on youtube like i'm actually in the process of um you know what i i
20:06 want to be intentionally really vague here i'm in the process of either trying
20:10 to sell or buy a youtube channel right now
20:13 and the person that i'm either trying to sell to or buy from
20:17 is attributing a value to this particular asset don't
20:22 worry about it uh do you i know what's going on oh okay okay but that's just
20:26 like don't worry about it vague to the point of like being aggressive
20:30 okay all right okay so they're trying to attribute a value to this item
20:35 that is all kind of around the subscriber number
20:39 and i can see how to the average person that
20:42 would make sense and on the low end of the scale like when
20:46 we're talking the first thousand first ten thousand subscribers yeah
20:50 that actually matters a channel with ten thousand subscribers
20:54 is an order of magnitude more valuable than one with a thousand yeah and that's
21:00 maybe true of a hundred thousand but probably not we're probably we're
21:04 probably losing we're probably hitting the tailing off of that and the the
21:08 reason for that is that subscribers
21:12 they're not actually that loyal of watchers which is a
21:16 combination of youtube's algorithmic way that they serve videos to them and
21:21 people just like moving on like in their lives like there's people who subscribe
21:26 to Linus tech tips literally nine years ago yeah like they subscribed when they
21:31 were 15. and you're now 24. maybe you
21:34 still watch maybe you do and that's super cool but maybe in the time between
21:39 grade 9 or 10 and graduating a university or college
21:44 or trade program potentially having a baby potentially having a child and a
21:48 job maybe at some point in that time
21:51 your interest faded you just kind of stopped watching youtube stopped serving
21:54 you the videos and you just didn't care
21:58 and that's fine so once you reach a certain scale what ultimately drives
22:03 viewership and i'm talking like more than half
22:07 for big channels that depend on virality and sharing and and uh especially if you
22:12 depend on virality and sharing there's some channels that will have multiple
22:15 videos that are over a million views but they have like 20 000 subscribers yep
22:19 and especially if you've been taking advantage of some of the recent algorithmic tricks like creating
22:24 feedback loops between yours and your brother's channel say for example um
22:30 it was very effective if you get dropped from recommended
22:35 that ultimately stops the chain reaction
22:39 and it's like you sell things only out of a brick and mortar store and they
22:42 took your store away like you might still be able to sell some things to
22:45 people that are going to like go through the process of going to your house or like you know what no hold on your store
22:50 is still there but you can't find it in the phone book
22:53 or like on the internet and anyone who shops at it isn't allowed to tell anyone
22:57 about it yeah like yeah literally just foot traffic um
23:01 so that's really really interesting and
23:05 a huge move from youtube that uh
23:08 i think is is uh you know what i i don't know if i could say
23:13 um anything more supportive than what i've
23:16 said which is why i'm gonna get into the stuff that's maybe a little bit not as
23:20 supportive the danger here
23:24 is that they have laid out
23:27 here's what they've said when one creator does something
23:32 particularly blatant like conducts a heinous prank where people are
23:35 traumatized promotes violence or hate towards a group demonstrates cruelty or
23:40 sensationalizes the pain of others in an attempt to gain views or subscribers
23:44 um we are going to
23:47 create this in rare instances they do say we created this broader set of tools
23:52 that can be used more quickly and effectively than our current system of guidelines and strikes so they are
23:57 basically saying that outside of the guidelines and the strike system which
24:02 are very sort of clearly laid out they have additional
24:06 harder tools that they can apply what sounds like to me they've laid out
24:11 examples but this sounds like pretty much at their discretion
24:15 which means that there are going to be some people out there who toe the line
24:22 pretty closely between satire
24:27 and hate speech or
24:31 political commentary and
24:35 um whatever and i worry about like
24:39 misquoting and i worry about things being taken out of
24:43 context i worry about the general culture we have of um
24:48 you know professional offense to anything and i
24:52 do there is genuine offense which is kind of what they're talking about but
24:56 then and one of the things that i have defended youtube over in the past is
25:02 their right to remove monetization
25:06 from something that they don't feel is appropriate for their platform and their
25:09 advertisers that is absolutely within their right and while others have gone
25:14 and and yelled censorship censorship
25:17 that is not censorship yeah what is
25:22 getting a lot closer to censorship
25:25 is refusing to recommend or provide
25:29 placement on the site for something that they deem
25:33 inappropriate at the same time yes at
25:36 the same time it is a private platform and it is well within their right but
25:41 that's why i said it's a lot closer yeah not allowing
25:45 someone to make money and make you look bad to your advertisers
25:49 that's a no-brainer no one should have been calling that censorship sorry
25:54 but saying look you're not going to get placement on the home page you're not going to get
25:58 recommended to people we're going to take away these mechanisms we're not
26:02 going to treat your content neutrally
26:06 okay now we're not talking about monetization we're talking about cutting
26:09 off your actual voice again it's a technically a private
26:14 platform a private platform it's not a government run and it's absolutely
26:17 within their right yeah so it is not censorship in that sense at all
26:22 but it is an interesting step if nothing
26:25 else and it's uh one of the side effects of having a free
26:29 completely open platform hey
26:33 anyways we'll talk about float planes
26:36 all right so um there you go guys that's kind of wow
26:42 that actually ended up taking up like half the freaking show which is probably
26:46 good which is probably fine because that was kind of the biggest thing that
26:49 happened at least in our corner of the internet this week
26:52 um when i got that in my inbox i just
26:56 just about freaked out because i was like oh no
26:59 because all i read was the the subject line first i was like oh crap you know
27:04 what what fresh hell is coming for us now on the
27:08 on the platform what are they cracking down all this
27:12 time all right well why don't we why don't we jump into something that's just a little
27:17 bit a little bit more chillaxed okay uh
27:20 Intel made some smart glasses that might
27:23 actually not make you look like a dummy yeah hey
27:27 look at that they look pretty normal okay other than the number which i'm
27:31 sure is just an engineering sample like number thing okay that might stay i'm
27:35 not sure about okay but this is Intel's new bond smart glasses the original
27:40 article here is from the verge and they're
27:44 they are a total departure from google
27:47 glass which uh led to the uh the up the uprising of the
27:52 glass holes yeah well because and reasons why you don't see any physical
27:56 hardware on it and there is not a camera there's no buttons um it is a screen it
28:02 says it doesn't have a screen because i believe it's sorry sorry no
28:07 okay okay technically no screen in the
28:11 traditional sense yes yeah there's there's no speaker and there's no
28:14 microphones and there you can't talk to and it can't talk there is no touch area
28:18 no so it has none of these things they look
28:21 and feel just like regular glasses
28:25 um this is this is really the line that
28:28 summarizes it best and this is from one of Intel's developers
28:32 we really believe that it can't have what they're calling a social cost can
28:36 you imagine the focus group that sat around and coined the term social cost
28:41 yeah how many of the things you do have a
28:44 social cost luke how many of the things you do don't have
28:48 a solution yeah i was just gonna say like everything i don't know
28:53 so and this is continuing the quote if it's
28:57 if it's weird if you look geeky if you're tapping i'm screwed looking at it
29:03 then we've lost okay so avant is just a system for just
29:08 displaying a small heads-up display in your peripheral vision it can show
29:13 simple messages like directions or notifications it works over bluetooth
29:17 with Android or iOS phones like your smartwatch taking commands from an app
29:21 on your phone and the display this is cool is projected into your eye
29:28 by a frickin laser that shines a red
29:32 monochrome image which is amazing somewhere in the neighborhood of 400 by
29:36 150 pixels onto a holographic reflector
29:41 on the glass's right lens one of the reasons why i love this is the red
29:45 monochrome brings it all the way back to virtual boy sorry continue
29:48 that image is then reflected into the back of your eyeball directly onto the
29:52 retina yeah the laser is so low power that it
29:56 doesn't even need to be certified oh goodness it's at the
30:01 it's at the very bottom of a class one laser that's not a good thing so i'm
30:05 sure it's fine because it's directly shining on the back of your retina the
30:08 image is always in focus works equally
30:12 uh on prescription glasses and non-prescription lenses works indoors
30:17 and outside is discrete beyond a faint red shimmer at like very specific angles
30:22 now is that in the picture that's there is that the red or is that from the
30:26 camera i think they might be over selling it in the picture
30:29 or is that just a reflection from the camera um you know what let me let me
30:33 have a let me have a quick poo here because they're saying that it's only
30:36 from certain angles that it'll be visible i don't think that's from the camera i think oh you know what i don't
30:42 actually know here you guys can you guys it's hard to tell whoops
30:46 uh no i don't think that's this is a little
30:50 video you want to play it no because i don't want to use their video okay yeah
30:55 um that's fair also that's a sticker
30:58 yeah okay so yeah that that qr code definitely won't stay there
31:02 so yeah the electronics are located entirely up near the face of the frames
31:07 um and so that the rest of the stems even the frame itself can flex a little
31:11 just like a regular pair of glasses and um
31:15 the batteries are wow where are the batteries huh
31:19 okay all custom hardware including the silicon
31:22 so it has bluetooth an app processor an accelerometer and a compass so it can
31:27 detect some basic head gestures oh come on
31:30 no social cost but like do you remember the head gestures with
31:34 google glass
31:38 thanks dude uh one kind of interesting thing is that it will just kind of tie
31:43 in with other stuff one of their notes here is you're
31:47 you're in the kitchen faulty towers uh lionel twitchin
31:51 yeah yeah yeah yeah uh you're no social costume you're
31:54 cooking you ask alexa uh or sorry the notes in here
31:58 a-l-e-x-a but you ask alexa i need recipes for cookies and bam apparently
32:03 just shows up in your glasses so because you can't talk to it it can't talk to
32:07 you but theoretically that will help you
32:10 okay yeah yeah so you can talk to other things you can use it that way
32:16 so um yeah i wish some luck with that i definitely want to try them i suspect
32:20 they're going to be super useless at the beginning like pretty much anything
32:24 smart yep but um yeah this is the direction that i think both of us have
32:28 been saying they have to go though yeah they have to look like normal glasses yeah everything has to be normal
32:33 like you're smart like you know all of these all these like
32:36 fitness trackers and sleep trackers like until i can put it on
32:41 and wear it for a week without taking it off at all it's not
32:44 collecting anywhere near enough useful data and it should take like half an
32:48 hour to charge like it has to actually become part of your life yeah um
32:54 speaking of becoming part of your life this episode of the wayne show is
32:57 brought to you by samsung we actually have to like move out of the
33:02 frame to show this entire monitor this is
33:06 this is a Linus for scale it's huge
33:11 so this is their 49 inch chg
33:16 90. this is a q-led monitor and it is
33:20 the largest gaming monitor on the market
33:24 at 49 inches with a 32 by 9 aspect ratio
33:30 and it is equal to two 27 inch
33:34 widescreen monitors put together like remember guys we have
33:39 seen wide monitors that are like two monitors
33:43 put together before but they were like two five by four monitors yeah now we
33:48 have two widescreen monitors with no bezel whatsoever and it's got an 1800 r
33:53 curvature that gives you a very immersive feel
33:58 so um like some curved monitors didn't need it this one did and it works really
34:02 well so things people could use it for actually we've had this demo running
34:06 pretty much the whole time but super widescreen gaming whether you want
34:10 uh like a more full view of your cockpit or whether you want better peripheral
34:14 vision in something like a shooter you can see they've got a demo of things
34:18 that you might not be able to see if you were gaming on a regular monitor versus
34:23 a 16x9 um for me looking at something
34:26 like this i go yeah productivity because i'm a big fan of well first widescreen
34:32 so first 16 by 10 yeah then i grew to like 16 by nine once the monitors got
34:37 bigger and you had to because there's no more 16 by 10. then when they went wider i
34:42 was a fan of that so if you're finding that your current
34:46 monitor is not wide enough or you have a dual 16x9 widescreen monitor and you
34:51 don't want the bezel anymore then i could see this for productivity absolutely
34:55 one of the things that Colton had actually pitched was playing games in
35:00 windowed mode in the middle and having like your
35:03 twitch chat oh yeah yeah on the side yeah yeah
35:06 what Colton i remembered i remembered what you said
35:10 okay Colton you can have obs or whatever on the other side like all your tools obs your
35:15 your tipping software all that kind of stuff you have the chat on the other side so you can run the whole thing on
35:19 one monitor um and it's got all the usual gaming features that you'd expect
35:23 it runs at 144 hertz
35:26 right keep rolling over this Ethernet cable um it's got support for HDR it
35:31 uses quantum dot technology which basically gives you better color
35:34 reproduction and better contrast it's got AMD freesync 2 which i think the in
35:40 a nutshell version of that is that it's freesync but with like HDR and then i
35:45 think like better freesync ranges and stuff like AMD's freesync standard is a
35:50 little loosey-goosey so freesync 2 i think basically means freesync i know i
35:54 noticed HDR yeah um it features one millisecond response times
35:59 and uh to celebrate samsung's appearance on twitch oh this is cool all samsung
36:05 gaming monitors including this one the 49-inch qled are on sale from now until
36:10 february 24th just go to link.twitch.tv
36:14 samsung and check it out today so thanks to samsung for sponsoring this episode
36:22 and also twitch for featuring us on the freaking uh
36:26 front page there there's like 26 000 people watching that cranked up average
36:30 viewers just just a little bit i got i got the pressure on me right now i got
36:35 pressure on me i don't know what you're talking about just come over here and do it what what's your what's your problem
36:39 Colton what's your what's your problem can we move this little well you can move it a little but you're probably
36:43 you're probably killing everybody's ears right now a twitch staff just sent us
36:47 bits hey no way that's freaking awesome
36:52 yeah what is
36:56 you're killing me Colton i think it's fine i don't think it does anything from this distance anyway all right
37:00 so oh don't touch the mic don't touch the
37:03 mic all right so let's move into some other
37:07 good stuff here oh oh uh okay i'm sorry
37:10 i know this is a real downer for you what um i'm really sorry to bring this
37:14 up this was originally posted by ryan vickers on the forum
37:20 and office 2019 i'm heartbroken
37:25 it's going to ship in the second half of 2018 which makes perfect sense of course
37:29 already and it will only be available for
37:32 Windows 10. that really see that just bugs me it bugs me too much i can't
37:36 handle it so this is what i want to know
37:40 okay okay
37:44 okay so we have office 365 subscriptions for our office yeah um
37:49 so it's always like installing these updates
37:53 what do they do
37:58 and i'm not trying to i'm not trying to be a jerk or anything
38:02 but literally the only thing that has changed about the office installation on
38:07 my computer in the last year has been that now when i go to open it a
38:13 lot of the time it just crashes instantly and doesn't open
38:16 and i'm not the only one in the office having this problem
38:20 and it's gotten better in the last few days but they didn't apply an update so
38:24 i don't know what's going on
38:28 i don't know why so like it's word
38:31 and excel so what is it that office doesn't
38:36 already do yeah like we are also okay we're not power
38:41 users yeah and especially of excel i'm sure there's
38:46 people that are like i want this new feature because excel is a really deep
38:49 powerful program yes yes yes yes yes but
38:52 i don't know man uh anyway okay fine let's let's let's go through our talking
38:55 points here an update by microsoft on the 1st of
38:59 february noted that it will arrive and it will only run blah blah blah
39:03 microsoft says software that is more than a decade old
39:07 and hasn't benefited from this innovation is difficult to secure and
39:10 inherently less productive it's definitely not less productive it's
39:14 way less productive to use Windows 10. as the pace of change accelerates it has
39:19 become imperative to move our software to a more modern cadence
39:24 okay i can okay i can understand part of this
39:27 is okay they're cutting off all the other ones because that sounds like they're
39:31 talking about Windows 7. it won't be shipping with the older MSI installer
39:36 the apps will all use the click to run installer
39:40 which is commonly used by office 365. here's a gripe about office 365. wow
39:45 microsoft is going to be taking a beating during this particular thing so
39:50 it's not because i'm an idiot if i set some time aside to deal with it i'm sure
39:54 i could figure it out it wouldn't take me that long but i have a skype account
39:59 but skype and skype for business shouldn't be called they shouldn't both
40:02 have skype in the name because they are completely different pieces of software
40:06 oh yeah running on completely different backgrounds
40:09 backgrounds back ends for completely different purposes other than that
40:12 they're both for communication so i have a skype account
40:16 and i have skype for business on my computer because it is installed with
40:20 office 365. now here's a problem on my desktop
40:24 skype for business automatically launches every time i turn on my
40:27 computer because like i i had to use some some external company that i had to
40:32 have a call with use the skype for business and that was the only thing i
40:35 could use so i had to get skype for business
40:39 discord's really hard never ended up actually like getting logged into it
40:43 because that was when i figured out this whole oh that account doesn't work for
40:47 that one okay i guess i'll uh okay i don't know what to do and for some
40:51 reason my account that i used to log in for my admin console that doesn't work
40:55 for it so i like i just wasn't sure what it was
40:59 but it's set to automatically launch and skype i don't know if you've ever
41:03 encountered this doesn't allow you to change any settings
41:06 of the program including auto launch preferences
41:10 unless you log in yeah so every time my computer restarts
41:16 because of an automated Windows update even if i didn't want it thank you very
41:19 much and i know i could change i know i could change it i know i know but updates are
41:24 actually important they are every time i do it
41:28 skype for business launches and you can't just right click and then close
41:33 skype at the bottom you get to like right click the thing and then did you
41:36 quit skype are you sure yes i'm are you
41:39 sure you want to quit skype yes i'm sure
41:43 so that's a complaint about office 365 that i'm sure there's an easy solution
41:47 too with a registry edit but i just haven't had like every time my computer reboots
41:52 i'm like oh i need to like do something like i sit down on my computer because i
41:56 have to use it not because i feel like tooling around with skype this is my
42:00 work computer um anyway my thing is just the the constantly
42:04 reinitiated telemetry stuff where you turn it all off and then they're like
42:07 Windows update it's back on get owned um
42:11 is pretty annoying there's some new telemetry stuff where they're like telling you what they're sending or
42:14 something i haven't looked into it but john john did a as fast as possible
42:18 they're just still doing it though um so there's that
42:23 and then like there's things that i just really don't like about the usability of
42:27 it that adds a lot of steps like we talked not that long ago about the network thing the networks and there is
42:31 like an easier way but they just like moved it and i didn't feel like there
42:35 was a compelling less conventional now uh like there's a lot there's more
42:39 clicks there's more steps they're really heavy ui elements
42:43 some people might think they look good you're such a nurse really don't they
42:46 have heavy ui elements which which you're right about but yeah it's just
42:50 such a nerd complaint but they break a lot these ui elements very heavy and
42:55 there is design issues with them like you didn't know those were buttons
42:58 yes like also the start menu being broken for it
43:03 has been good for a long time now by the way but the start menu being broken for
43:06 literally over a year was laughable yeah like basic functionality just hasn't
43:10 been there so i've been staying off but they're talking about things more than a
43:14 decade old software that is more than a decade old so they're talking about Windows 7.
43:18 yeah yeah because that's what a huge amount of users are still using because
43:21 Windows 10 has many problems um
43:25 what about the other ones did you just forget that you released other operating
43:29 systems yeah apparently that aren't that old 8.1 is like not bad yeah yeah
43:34 especially the embedded one yeah we use 8.1 embedded on our final render server
43:39 the one that actually has an overclocked
43:43 10 core extreme edition in it because that's server right and water cooling
43:49 in a 2u don't worry about it anyway the point is
43:53 we use 8.1 embedded i don't think that machine has ever failed in export no
43:57 and b the embedded versions are awesome and then the the like proper chopped
44:01 down version of Windows 10 they don't want you to buy it you have
44:05 to be on a subscription you're only allowed it was the same with 8.1 it was
44:08 almost impossible to get it yeah the only reason we got it was because we know someone who knows someone who
44:13 obtained a key yeah um it is what it is i mean by and large the best version of
44:18 their operating system they're just like no you guys don't get it by and large we
44:22 run legit versions of Windows we have office 365 microsoft gets a ton of our
44:26 money but maybe this will get me in trouble i
44:29 guess but on that one machine i am running a copy of Windows that i
44:34 didn't buy because i can't buy it right yeah
44:38 if they were willing to sell it to me i would gladly pay for it yeah
44:42 anyway let's move on key iphone source code leak gets posted
44:48 online in and i quote the biggest leak in history
44:56 the biggest leak in apple history
44:59 so the source code for a core component of the iphone's operating system iboot
45:04 was posted on github so here's the implications uh thank you
45:09 shreyas1 for posting this this could give hackers an easier time finding
45:13 flaws and bugs that could allow them to crack or decrypt an iphone i don't know
45:16 how they would decrypt it given that this wouldn't tell them anything about the security element or secure element
45:20 rather um could eventually allow advanced programmers to emulate iOS on
45:24 non-apple platforms
45:29 that would be so helpful that would be freaking oh my god
45:32 that would be so good it could make iphone jailbreaks easier to achieve
45:39 it's already pretty easy am i am i over selling this no my
45:43 sadness 100 um so the github the github
45:46 code the github yeah is labeled iboot which is uh like the iphone's BIOS kind
45:51 of and the first pro it's the first process that runs on your iphone so it
45:54 loads and verifies the kernel and make sure it is properly signed by
45:58 apple then executes the code says it's for iOS 9 but portions of it are likely
46:02 still in use in iOS 11. i mean you look at any
46:05 you don't rewrite an operating system from scratch from
46:09 one year to another and apple has taken particular care to
46:14 keep iboot secure and its code private
46:17 bugs in the boot process are the most valuable ones if reported to apple
46:20 through its bounty program which values them at a max payment of 200 000 to be
46:24 clear i seriously doubt they've ever paid out 200k
46:28 and i don't they ever really will but that's the max payment you're getting
46:31 somewhere in there you're getting money yep you're getting good money uh a few
46:35 hours after the publication apple sent a dmca takedown demanding github take down
46:39 the boot code good luck with that what's that what's
46:42 that called no the what effect again uh the frey sand effect yes yes yes so
46:47 like i guarantee it's everywhere already
46:50 um yeah so they're saying the idea github might have even taken it down really
46:55 fast yeah but the second anyone saw that it was copied oh yeah and it's
47:00 everywhere like the stuxnet code if you guys remember that
47:03 that wasn't that do you remember stuxnet i want to figure out the specifics so i
47:06 don't get it wrong so you can check that well so the iboot source code is
47:10 proprietary includes an apple copyright notice it is not open source said their
47:14 their message so it first surfaced last year
47:18 apparently posted by um
47:21 a reddit user called apple underscore internals on the jailbreak subreddit the
47:24 post didn't get much attention though since the user was new and didn't have enough reddit karma
47:29 the new availability on github means it is circulating much more widely in the
47:33 underground jailbreaking community and in iOS hacking circles okay so stuxnet
47:38 was a malicious computer worm first uncovered in 2010 by kaspersky lab and
47:43 it was responsible for causing substantial damage to iran's nuclear
47:48 program oh okay it was one of the first
47:51 worms to directly cause physical
47:55 damage interesting and the code is out there i
47:59 may or may not have it in a zip like it's everywhere
48:04 okay so this is either great news if you're
48:07 into the iOS hacking scene or terrible news if you're apple and you're now
48:12 going to be trying to figure out how to basically replace this yeah because i
48:15 don't know i don't really see what they could do
48:19 other than rewrite significant portions of it to
48:22 make it very very very different um
48:25 yeah it's also a big hit to the companies like
48:31 i don't even know what to call it well their security image yeah i mean that's
48:34 one of the big things that apple trades on is that we take privacy and we take
48:38 security really seriously and we're good at this stuff this is a big hit you know
48:42 trust us with all this data including your pins and your fingerprints and your
48:47 credit card data and a facial scan trust us with all this stuff we got this
48:52 and this is a pretty big leak now in fairness to apple this type of a leak
48:56 is is very different from that type of data and the way that
49:00 they say that they handle it where it's stored in a secure element inside your
49:04 physical device and everyone gets sent to them like that's the difference
49:08 between security as a design and security as uh you know building
49:15 with you know people standing by the doors like this like a secured design is
49:18 not the same as like having good security on your campus
49:22 but it still is the kind of thing that people might not necessarily know how to
49:26 interpret um in other news
49:30 russian nuclear scientists arrested
49:33 for bitcoin mining plot this was posted
49:37 by ginger 137 on the forum and this is freaking hilarious
49:43 the arrested scientists worked at the secret factory which made the ussr's
49:49 first nuclear bomb so we're talking people that had that
49:56 security clearance okay
49:59 so do you want to go this was originally
50:02 posted on bbc they used one of russia's most powerful
50:07 super computers to mine bitcoin the supercomputer was not supposed to be
50:11 connected they tried to they tried to yeah yeah did i they said they did yeah
50:16 you said they didn't okay yeah they tried to the supercomputer was not supposed to be connected to the internet
50:21 to prevent intrusion which makes sense and once the scientists attempted to do
50:24 so the nuclear center's security department was alerted and the
50:28 scientists arrested so they really didn't get far
50:33 like at all there have been reports of some other
50:37 industrial facilities in russia being used for crypto mining and one
50:41 businessman reportedly bought two power stations for the activity
50:46 buying power stations that is next level like legitimately red
50:50 alert two that is next level red alert bitcoin edition
50:54 um so that's on your mind bitcoin use the things to build power stations mind more
50:59 bitcoin so that's pretty funny
51:02 in other news this is posted by hey yo on the forum
51:06 the original article is from cnet the first phone with it oh dang it i did
51:10 it again the first phone with a diamond screen will come in 2019
51:17 so finally diamond i did it again sorry
51:21 keep playing the intro so finally diamond will have a real
51:27 legitimate use that makes it valuable
51:30 well you know that well okay it has legitimate uses like being put on
51:34 cutting blades or whatever else the case may be or abrasives but the whole thing
51:38 with like like raw like mined diamonds
51:42 being worth lots of money that whole thing is a construct for those of you
51:46 who are watching out there who don't know i bought into it
51:51 there's a high probability that you'll buy into it or you'll have to buy into
51:55 it because someone has your ARM behind your back and they're pulling it up in a
51:58 jerk in motion um but it's a big scam
52:03 they're not worth anything they're just shiny pebbles
52:07 okay it's really valuable for putting on like saw blades i've spent literally
52:11 thousands of dollars on these shiny pebbles
52:14 and someday you might too it's a sad day it's a sad day
52:20 and you know what focus instead on the happy
52:23 day the the wedding day not the sad day with the money which is also probably a
52:27 financially sad day yeah um let's ignore that no it depends how you roll it you
52:32 guys did we made money yeah okay yeah so that's impressive most people don't most
52:37 people don't but most people did not marry my wife
52:41 okay she flipped her wedding dress for a
52:44 profit chair covers profit
52:48 centerpieces profit okay she she she flipped that [ __ ] for a
52:53 profit she's incredible
52:58 that's pretty epic yeah anyway
53:01 um the other great thing these are probably gonna be lab grown diamonds
53:05 yeah so even then the the the ones that come from the ground still suck
53:10 so um akan semiconductors mirage diamond
53:14 glass promises to be stronger than other materials used to cover a phone's
53:18 display today the diamond glass uses a nano crystal pattern i swear
53:23 nano has to be actually the biggest buzzword no blockchain
53:28 no yeah nanoblockchain no
53:32 the thing about nano is it's just a prefix yeah so it can be on nanotubes
53:36 it can be on nano cell nano freaking anything nano and block
53:41 that companies ipo nano blockchain industries okay
53:47 it all runs on your phone yeah anyway the point is it uses a nano
53:51 crystal pattern that randomly arranges the crystals instead of lining them up
53:55 along their crystal planes so that discourages deep cracks from forming and
54:00 damaging the materials underneath it can actually this is cool it can be applied
54:03 in conjunction with other materials like gorilla glass as a top layer their ceo
54:07 promised that let's see the first device by the end of 2017
54:11 twitch plays pokemon came up with the best one so far he said nano block a
54:14 nano quantum block chain yes yeah yes
54:18 thank you uh now they're aiming for 2019. so like
54:22 anything with nano in it it's delayed yeah
54:26 the technology is being actively tested with as yet undef un identified device
54:31 makers and they are stress testing its strength trying to reduce glare and
54:34 making sure the surface transmits electrical signals well so that your
54:38 fingers can navigate the touch screen without a glitch
54:44 what else we got this is all boring yeah boring
54:50 boring boring boring
54:53 this is all boring let's let's just uh let's go on the forum and find our own
54:58 news or we could talk about what's going on
55:01 Floatplane stuff oh we can also talk about that thing what thing uh the
55:04 creepy faces what are you talking about oh that oh gross where is that that's
55:08 right i can i can post it in the chat yeah post it in the chat i'll grab it
55:12 from there okay so ai is getting freaking scary now
55:18 there was a there was a period for a while there where face swaps between me
55:23 and luke were kind of a meme on the forum yeah um and you know what actually
55:27 uh send it to me in hangouts um if you can okay uh then post it in the chat and
55:33 then i'll i'll try and grab it yeah i can grab it okay um where is have you posted in the chat yet no oh okay i'm
55:37 loading up hangouts okay okay okay perfect that works so let's load up some
55:41 Linus and luke face swaps because this was some creepy stuff that was going on
55:47 for a bit there and it was it's pretty scary so you know here's one
55:53 um like that that is that is some gross that is some
55:57 gross face swappage right there um no offense to you but i'm glad i
56:00 don't have your face yeah no that yeah like as long as i think it's like always
56:05 worse in that direction um
56:08 wow like none of them are showing up they're they're a little old at this
56:12 point there was it was really trendy in like probably 20 late 2013 early 2014
56:17 huh yeah really
56:21 face swap this picture it's probably the same one
56:26 it's gone yeah wow this was like yeah 2014 early 2014
56:32 early 2014 late 23rd that was four years ago okay that's a whole other thing
56:36 right there oh my
56:40 oh my um okay
56:46 all right all right anyway anyway so
56:49 thanks to deep learning face swapping
56:54 is no longer limited to still images did
56:58 you post that in the chat i sent it to you you sent it to me okay cool let's get this i can put this down no no no
57:02 hold on hold on which one which one which one both but the first first one
57:06 first okay yeah yeah here we go here we go
57:09 here we go so check this check this out you guys it needs kind of like a second
57:13 no no yeah yeah that's fine that's fine okay so this is a normal Linus
57:19 talking to the camera this
57:22 is over 2 000 frames of data
57:28 processed with an image of luke
57:32 so it's what is it it's 2000 frames it's modeled
57:35 and then it's like processed over top to swap luke's face
57:41 onto my talking head now i think we showed on
57:45 the website a little while ago hold on one quick thing uh someone using some
57:50 footage of george w bush just kind of sitting still
57:53 and like nodding along and moved his mouth and made him say stuff yeah so
57:57 this is is a very similar technology to that so how does this work so he says i
58:02 trained my model using 2000 plus images each for you and Linus pulled frames
58:07 from Floatplane and youtube videos to gather all the data and trained my gtx
58:12 970 for 36 hours
58:15 it's just a 970 for 36 hours and a whole bunch of photos okay there's another one
58:19 there's another one it's the other way around yeah yeah
58:23 so let's pull up the Linus and loop one actually here you guys can see them side
58:26 by side here so this is my face onto luke
58:32 it is a it is a surprisingly convincing effect if the
58:37 eyes if the if the like iris was smaller
58:41 i think it would be more believable i think that's the like one thing that it screwed up
58:45 yeah and well that and the fact that like you have facial hair and i don't
58:49 and it kind of blended it yeah rather than yeah it did okay i think it
58:53 actually did a pretty good job of that it just looks unnatural for that face to
58:57 have facial hair yes it looks like this person should shave yeah
59:00 more than the other one and like you can tell like these lines are higher up on
59:05 your face so it looks a little weird but like if i'd never seen either of us
59:11 i'd have gone like okay yeah that's a dude especially at like kind of blocky
59:15 web streaming quality yeah and i did notice when looking at it myself when
59:19 comparing the two yeah i was like okay mine looks more unnatural but that's
59:23 probably because it's me looking at it
59:26 probably like i i don't know it's really interesting um i never realized how
59:30 creepy Linus's eyes were says majestic failure well they don't look like that
59:35 it's it's trying to scale it it's it screwed up slightly i think uh so the
59:39 reason why this actually showed up is because um
59:42 three different websites yeah i believe
59:47 i don't remember what they all were yeah i know one of them is discord but
59:50 they've blocked intentionally now like discord would probably block this but i know
59:55 other sites are more tuned to normally having this type of
59:59 content and they've blocked it as well but it's porn
60:02 where they've done this with like a celebrity's face yeah yeah and put it on
60:07 an actor in a scene yeah um and that's like becoming a thing and
60:12 all these different sites i believe pornhub is one of them i know discord's
60:16 one but i didn't know that was a thing anyways right and like i think there's a
60:19 couple other sites are all like nope because they don't want to deal with any of the legal issues i'm sure well yeah
60:24 especially because like guys even even ignoring the like i forget if it's
60:30 defamation or libel or slander yeah like they're all
60:33 slightly different like one of them is written and one of them's spoken or blah blah blah blah i think slander spoken
60:38 anyway the point is aside from being sued for damages over
60:42 that celebrities especially like currently
60:45 they're called deep fakes okay um like legitimately
60:49 legitimately famous ones they often are able to claim
60:54 that their image especially if it was pulled from a copyrighted work is their
61:00 ip so and you'll have a little bit because like uh with some of these things it's
61:05 community contributed content so they're protected to a certain degree but they
61:09 have to get rid of it really fast yes um so they're trying to put fairly
61:13 heavy-handed which is fair not heavy-handed in a in an unfair way
61:17 heavy-handed and this is definitely how they should do it way uh rules in place
61:21 to try to stop these things right
61:26 all right so uh i think that's pretty much it for
61:29 the show today thank you to all the 10 i can legitimately say for the first
61:34 time tens of thousands of you who are watching thanks to samsung for
61:37 sponsoring the show and we will see you again next week same bat time same batch
61:42 bye oh dang it i meant to roll the intro
61:49 floodplain oh crap stop it we're back
61:57 yeah hold on we got some cool stuff going on on the Floatplane
62:01 plane it's gonna be a folk plane no plane
62:07 uh everyone's asking about the spacex launch it was amazing you should you
62:10 should just go check it out all right uh so this we actually did a
62:16 piece of content for like real actual professionals oh
62:21 interesting modeling and cad design
62:24 which i know is redundant do you really need a xeon and a quadro we investigated
62:29 it lots of benchmarking lots of testing
62:32 lots of work good piece of content make sure you did you like work with someone
62:36 else on it um well alex okay yeah yeah don't worry that's yeah alex did it yeah
62:40 okay gaming at 120 hertz on a tv so a lot of
62:46 people don't know this but there are tvs out there already ignoring NVIDIA's bf
62:50 gds that can run at 120 hertz with very low
62:53 input lag so we tested out one of them and talk about the experience
62:57 um LTT computer that self-destructs if it's
63:01 hacked which is actually not clickbait oh it
63:05 actually self-destructs if you tamper with it through software
63:08 physically if it's a successful hack by moving it it's pretty it's pretty
63:13 hardcore but if it's a successful hack it would have no idea
63:18 okay so if you fail at hacking it yes you don't get another chance okay it's
63:22 gone all right there you go uh this one's pretty fun this is the mystic
63:25 space warrior pc can't call it jedi cause
63:32 what mystic space for you shut up no i got you at first i was just like what
63:37 and you should call that laser sword space warrior
63:40 gaben jr here uh who's actually Anthony that that that
63:45 that handle um has been pushing me
63:49 for retro content to do more retro content for a long time so we've got one
63:53 piece coming up this is the sd two uh
63:56 two snes so it's exactly what it sounds like sd card two super nintendo adapter
64:02 um and we've actually got another one coming that i don't think is up yet that
64:06 is pretty flippin cool so that's um is that cylinder embargo i think it's under
64:10 embargo forget it um and then finally this is one of the coolest videos that
64:14 we've done this year maybe one of the coolest videos we've done ever uh we
64:18 went and checked out a real nuclear fusion
64:21 prototype reactor um that's cool yeah so
64:25 they're in burnaby of all places of course there's so many crazy things of
64:28 course they're in burnaby uh oh okay okay so yeah another video we
64:32 have coming very soon but that isn't up yet is uh on the super nt from analog
64:36 they basically reverse engineered the hardware of the super nintendo super
64:40 sick which is really cool um
64:44 so so you can run snazz games in hardware on it it's not emulation
64:49 yeah um so we've got a review coming of that yeah all right okay okay we're gone
64:53 for real this time bye bye bye bye
65:01 people are like talking about twitch subs someone's like who's this
65:05 noel ferran says they don't care about twitch subs
65:10 in the twitch chat
65:13 lord sith lioness yes yes no i mean dark dark space warrior