

Overtired
Christina Warren, Jeff Severns Guntzel, and Brett Terpstra
Christina Warren & Brett Terpstra have odd sleep schedules. They nerd out over varied interests: gadgets, software, and life in a connected world. Tune in to find out what keeps them up at night.
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Mar 18, 2021 • 1h 1min
231: Did We Get Through The Taylor Part Yet
Taylor won Artist of the Year, so obviously we’re talking about that. Christina is offended by Brett’s dismissiveness but he gets to title the episodes, so… Plus new gigs, new keyboards, and addictive games.
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Audible is the leading provider of spoken-word entertainment and audiobooks, ranging from best sellers and new releases to celebrity memoirs, languages, motivation, original entertainment, podcasts and more. Visit audible.com/overtired, or text overtired to 500–500 to start your free trial.
Show Links
Oracle
Taylor Swift makes Grammys history with ‘Folklore’ win, becoming first woman in three-peat club
Beyoncé
Destiny’s Child
TLC
UHK v2
Threes
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Check out more episodes at overtiredpod.com and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Find Brett as @ttscoff and Christina as @film_girl, and follow Overtired at @ovrtrd on Twitter.
Transcript
Brett_1
Brett: [00:00:00] [00:00:00] Hello, you’re listening to overtired. I’m Brett Terpstra and I am here with Christina Warren. How are you, Christina?
[00:00:11] Christina: [00:00:11] I’m pretty good bread. Except right before we started recording you were, you were, you were unfairly dismissive of our podcasts, like muse, like the, there is on Detra for this podcast. You were, you were unfairly dismissive of, so other than that though, no, I’m actually pretty good. How are you?
[00:00:31] Brett: [00:00:31] Um, I, so I slept really well last night for maybe the best sleep I’ve gotten in a long time, which is surprising given how excited I was about my, my big secret news, but how are, how are you doing?
[00:00:47] Christina: [00:00:47] similarly, right. Like I had, um, Are really good sleep. Um, and it was one of those things where like, and it wasn’t one of those situations where I had to like, get super high to go to sleep. So I slept for, [00:01:00] cause that happens sometimes. Like if I take like an edible or whatever, I’m like,
[00:01:03] Brett: [00:01:03] sleep well, if you’re high.
[00:01:05] Christina: [00:01:05] Oh yeah.
[00:01:06] Brett: [00:01:06] Oh man. I never like back. I never got like a really, truly restful sleep on any, any
[00:01:13] Christina: [00:01:13] Well, okay. I’m not sure if I would call it a restful, but it is one of those things where it’s just like black and, and then I just wake up and I’m like, Oh, okay, cool. Um, no, but in this case I’m going to have some weird dreams which happens sometimes, but it was a fairly, like a consistent and long period of sleep.
[00:01:31] And I went to bed like before 10:00 PM. And so it was one of those things where I got like a lot of sleep, so yeah.
[00:01:39] Brett: [00:01:39] Yeah. So I got to tell you my big news.
[00:01:42] Christina: [00:01:42] I was going to say, please tell us your big news breads health club corner, as well as a Brett’s news corner. Cause I think these two are probably going to be related even if not directly. What’s the big news.
[00:01:52] Brett: [00:01:52] So you know that, uh, that thing with Oracle it’s happening. I’m part of a [00:02:00] developer relations team. I am my, the job title is like technical writer, but it’s like a full like multimedia they’re going to make use of all of the skills that I’ve honed ever since my days at two plus my development experience.
[00:02:15] And it is, I have never felt like a job was more tailored to me.
[00:02:22]Christina: [00:02:22] no,
[00:02:23] Brett: [00:02:23] of the industry for a decade. And in the meantime, as L put it, the industry grew a job for me.
[00:02:30] Christina: [00:02:30] no, she’s exactly right. That’s the perfect way of putting it. And it’s so funny because when you and I were talking on systematic about. My shift from journalism to developer relations and, and advocacy. And, um, our jobs are going to be solar, like not the same, but, but, but similar in some ways, and, and, uh, whatnot, I kind of felt the same way when I was talking to you, even I was thinking, I was like, God, you know, it pro wanted something like this.
[00:02:53] Like, he’d be a great developer advocate or, or a technical writer or whatever, but you’d be great in dev role. I’ve always [00:03:00] thought that, so this is so exciting. This is so awesome. And Ella is exactly right. They built a job for you. They, they th th the industry grew because you know, what I think happened is that people have seen like that the most effective way to connect in and communicate with communities.
[00:03:18]Is having people who are naturally part of those communities who have already naturally on their own been doing what you and I have done, like our whole careers, which is to, you know, blog and chat with people and do podcasts and, and create fun side projects. Like you even more than me. But like, I, cause I’ve always been really interested in telling the stories and figuring out what stuff is and highlighting stuff.
[00:03:41] But like you’ve also had that component where you’ve built so much cool stuff. Um, and that really resonates with people and it builds trust because they know that like, if you say try this, this is cool. Or this is how you can do something. Like you have credibility and then you also have like integrity.
[00:03:59] So, [00:04:00] you know, if something sucks, like you’re not gonna do a whole thing on it.
[00:04:03] Brett: [00:04:03] There’s like, uh, I’m going to have to be learning new stuff all the time.
[00:04:08] Christina: [00:04:08] Which is so good for
[00:04:09] Brett: [00:04:09] they be like here, write about how Oracle works with TensorFlow and I’ll be like, all right, let’s sit down and do some coursework real quick. Um, so yeah, I’m kind of excited about that part. I’m also like I’ve been an indie developer I’ve lost count almost 10 years, I think.
[00:04:27] And I will say that it does not provide a lot of financial stability. So just the idea of having a salary and, uh, and benefits and like a monthly paycheck like that. That’s why last night I slept, like I thought I was going to be too excited to sleep. Cause I just found this out yesterday.
[00:04:48] Um, And then I thought like, Oh geez, that I might not sleep at all, but I did. And, and I slept like, like a stress-free [00:05:00] anxiety-free sleep. It was kind of amazing.
[00:05:03] Christina: [00:05:03] No, this is so good. And, and this is where it does. And I’m going to ask you, like, uh, obviously not like not very specific questions and whatnot, but, um, this is the full-time role, right? Like this isn’t a contract role. Okay. So
[00:05:15] Brett: [00:05:15] salary position.
[00:05:17] Christina: [00:05:17] fantastic. So that does mean that like, I mean, not, I think you were on Medicaid before or whatever, so you have pretty good insurance, but like, this is going to be a potentially an even like, better level than that, because you won’t have to go through certain things.
[00:05:30] So like, I’m assuming, like it’s a big company, it’s a, you know, a multi, multi multi-billion dollar company. So, um, how do you feel to like, not be in like healthcare, like purgatory.
[00:05:46]Brett: [00:05:46] Yeah, no, the benefits package is outstanding.
[00:05:49] I have never felt more, um, happy with, uh, with, with compensation. This is, yeah, it’s going to be amazing. I’m a [00:06:00] little worried that it’s going to affect my, like, I’m very open about mental health and, uh, I’m very open about, uh, how I feel about things. Uh, maybe not to the extent you are, you’re very open about how you feel like things in Microsoft hasn’t fired you.
[00:06:17] Christina: [00:06:17] No, they haven’t. No, they haven’t even yelled at me. So, um,
[00:06:21] Brett: [00:06:21] worried that I’ll censor myself more.
[00:06:23] Christina: [00:06:23] you probably will. I mean, look, I’m going to, this is the hilarious thing. I actually do censor myself more. Um, there are things that I won’t say, but there’s like a line and you you’ll fill the line. You’ll know it also, they hired you, you went through a background check, they know who you are, but that’s the thing that I would, I would tell yourself, like, if they’re not, if they’re not unknown, like you’re not an unknown entity, this isn’t something where they went into this, like without knowing something and part of.
[00:06:52] Why they hired you, candidly is because of your social reach. Like that’s not even a remotely small part of it. That’s actually a pretty major part of it is [00:07:00] obviously your skills and whatnot. But it’s the fact that so many people know you and the reach that you have, that’s why they hired you. So
[00:07:07] Brett: [00:07:07] Yeah,
[00:07:08] Christina: [00:07:08] to me, like I know that also know that yeah.
[00:07:12] I mean, I would definitely become aware of whatever the company guidelines are, uh, so that you don’t reach them because you don’t want to lose a job.
[00:07:19] Brett: [00:07:19] right, right.
[00:07:20] Christina: [00:07:20] but find out what the guidelines are and then find out like where to fit in that. And. There are some things like I’ve, I don’t know, like they’re bare ways that they’re, they’re things that like I kind of sometimes want to comment on.
[00:07:34] And then I think, and I’m like, you know what? I don’t have to comment on this. Like, which I think you would have less of an issue with than I would, because you don’t comment on everything. And, and so like, I’m, I’m, I’m, I’m very opinionated and, and what I’ve learned, and this is going to be hilarious for people who listen to this pod, especially cause I’m much less like this is the most like me that I probably am on any podcast that I do for sure.
[00:07:59] Uh, [00:08:00] in no small part, because it’s, I think probably like a, it’s not a, it’s, it’s a smaller listenership and it’s more intimate. These are people who know us for us and who’ve been with us awhile. So, uh, it feels even though it’s still just every bit as public as anything else, it feels more intimate anyway, uh, which might be, you know, a bad like calculus on my part, but fuck it.
[00:08:24] Uh,
[00:08:24] Brett: [00:08:24] still public. It’s still out there for everybody.
[00:08:28] Christina: [00:08:28] Oh, I’m aware. I’m aware. Just saying which again, I’m saying like, could be a bad calculus on my part, but again, fuck it. But no, it’s one of those things. I think sometimes I’m like, okay, do I have to comment on this outrage, controversy, whatever thing that’s happening. And sometimes I’m like, no, you know what?
[00:08:41] You don’t like, you don’t need to get involved in this fight or this war or any of this stuff. But if it’s something like. The black lives matter stuff that was happening over the summer. I was like at no problem being public about that. And the company was supportive of that, but there are lines, right?
[00:08:57] Like I’m not going to call for violence. I’m not going to call [00:09:00] for, you know, like hate or, or try to, you know, um, like, uh, you know, direct harassment or whatever towards anyone. I mean, there are other things for me, the biggest line and, um, is that I don’t insult the company products. I might make fun of the naming sometimes ingest.
[00:09:17] And I might like harken back to like bad stuff from the past, like in, in a, in a way that’s clearly done with love, but. We are like, I work at a, you know, trillion and a half dollar company that has a bajillion lines of business and not everything that like Microsoft makes, I think is fantastic. So I don’t talk about the stuff that I don’t think is great.
[00:09:41] I’m going to do in that courtesy. I’m not going to lie and be like, Oh, this thing is awesome. If I think that it’s not, but I’m not going to, I’m not going to talk badly about it. And so I feel like Oracle is going to be a similar thing. Like you don’t have to talk about the stuff that you don’t think is great.
[00:09:56] You don’t have to promote it. They’re not paying you for that, but you don’t [00:10:00] have to in shouldn’t and I don’t think you ever would anyway, publicly comment when it’s bad,
[00:10:05] Brett: [00:10:05] Yeah, no. I mean like my entire, uh, blogging career, I have never published, uh, like hit pieces because if something doesn’t make me happy, it’s not worth my time. Like I write about things I love and that can come across as like, he loves everything, but I just ignore the stuff that, that doesn’t live up to my expectations.
[00:10:31]Christina: [00:10:31] exactly. I mean, I’m, I’m similar. Like I, I do like bitch and complain about stuff, but the stuff that I really care about, I mean, and this is what I hear from people who. Like my stuff, who I work with. And, and it’s interesting because I get feedback sometimes from people who I work with and, and by feedback, I mean, positive feedback, uh, I’m always interested.
[00:10:48] It’s always interesting. There’s some people that I work with who get shit for their tweets and their social posts. And then I’m like way more out there. And I don’t, I’m setting myself up for this, as I’m saying this to probably get screamed at for stuff. [00:11:00] But, um, but I’ve also been doing this a very long time.
[00:11:03] So I feel like I have a good understanding of the line and the thing that I hear consistently. And I think this is absolutely true for you because this is part of the reason why we’re friends and what attracted us to working together and doing our podcasts and stuff is like bridges, where you get excited about stuff.
[00:11:18] We like it. We love stuff. That’s fun. And, and for me, like, I don’t ever want to be. Like similar to you. Like if it, if it doesn’t make me happy, I might bitch about it on Twitter because Twitter is my hobby. Actually, a friend of mine pointed that out yesterday because we, we all worked at the same place, which was very dramatic and very chaotic.
[00:11:38] And, um, we all are no longer at that place. And we were talking about, okay, because one of our friends is about to start a new job and they’re like, what am I going to do? And I don’t have this, this drama and this chaos. They’re like, you’re going to get hobbies. She’s like, I wonder what my hobbies is going to be.
[00:11:52] You know, Christina’s is Twitter. And I was like, Oh yeah, that’s true. Twitter is my hobby. Um, but like, if, if you don’t have [00:12:00] something like that, like you’re just going to share the stuff you’re excited about and the cool stuff you do, and what’s going to be great for them is you’re going to figure out ways to do cool stuff with their different services and APIs, and that’s going to be awesome, but you’re also still going to be able to, when it fits work on your own stuff, I have a feeling that’s going to be the thing that is going to be.
[00:12:19]Not the hardest for you, but maybe the thing they’ll take the most time for you to like, figure out the balance is not feeling guilty when you let some of your side projects and stuff, not take top priority and that’s okay. Like it’s going to be okay to be like, I’m still gonna update the blog, still going to do my podcast, but I can let stuff go a little bit because I have this other priority, which is paying me a salary.
[00:12:47] Brett: [00:12:47] See, I want to keep doing over tired, but if I had to let something go, I would probably let systematic go. It’s like, I love the show. I feel like, um, I’m [00:13:00] proud of the work I’ve done there. Uh, but it takes a lot of time with scheduling and then interviewing, and then it always takes way more editing than this show does.
[00:13:10] And it’s, it’s an easily, three times more time consuming than overtired.
[00:13:15] Christina: [00:13:15] Yeah. Yeah. I mean, and what I would say for that, I mean, you’ll get the gist of things. Like you can always make it quarterly or, or make, you know what I mean? Like you can always adjust to the, the frequency.
[00:13:25] Brett: [00:13:25] Quarterly once every three months. That that was our schedule for a little while.
[00:13:32] Christina: [00:13:32] It was. I mean, if you make a consistent, our problem is we weren’t consistent. And part of the reason that ours was so crazy was candidly. It was me, was my job. I was in other countries all the time and I didn’t have time and we didn’t have sponsors at that point. So it was one of those things where we didn’t need to be like,
[00:13:50] Brett: [00:13:50] also, I burnt out, like there
[00:13:53] Christina: [00:13:53] you burnt out too.
[00:13:54] Yeah.
[00:13:54] Brett: [00:13:54] a year and a couple of months that I wasn’t doing systematic either. I just, I, I burnt out
[00:14:00] [00:14:00] Christina: [00:14:00] Yes. Okay. So we were burnt out. We weren’t, we didn’t have like the pull of a sponsor to, you know, bring us in and then you know, which, which, which is a important thing. And, um, then like also I had my day job and my, my work comes first. Right? Like that’s, that’s what keeps me like living in nice shortens and, um, paid for by health insurance.
[00:14:24] And so, yeah. You know, like you, you make those choices.
[00:14:29] Brett: [00:14:29] Yeah, no, this, this, this is, um, a life-changing step for me. Uh, everything the world looks different to me today and I loved being an indie developer. I loved, uh, the schedule and the life I carved out for myself in that manner. But yeah, no, this, this feels right. This feels really good.
[00:14:51] Christina: [00:14:51] I’m so happy for you. So when, when, when do you start?
[00:14:54] Brett: [00:14:54] There’s going to be like the whole onboarding process, but within the next, we’ll say month, [00:15:00] uh, depending on how all the paperwork goes,
[00:15:03] Christina: [00:15:03] That’s fantastic. I’m so happy for you. I’m so happy for you. Welcome to the, um, Oh my God. You can now be one of those annoying people who uses an avocado as your emoji in your, um, on your Twitter,
[00:15:15] Brett: [00:15:15] why would I do that?
[00:15:16] Christina: [00:15:16] because you’re a dev avocado.
[00:15:19] Brett: [00:15:19] Uh, no,
[00:15:21] Christina: [00:15:21] I know,
[00:15:23] Brett: [00:15:23] not going to do that. Not going to happen.
[00:15:25] Christina: [00:15:25] I don’t do that
[00:15:26] Brett: [00:15:26] I will, I will, I will maintain my, uh, my Twitter avatar, always being some weird yoga pose.
[00:15:33]Christina: [00:15:33] Fair. I like that.
[00:15:35] Brett: [00:15:35] Yeah. Um, um, um, we have a sponsor for, we have only one sponsor today. So this is not going to be a show where, uh, like 30 minutes of it is dedicated to talking about
[00:15:49] Christina: [00:15:49] Thank you. Thank you to our great listeners who haven’t unsubscribed
[00:15:53] Brett: [00:15:53] Right? I’ll be honest. That one episode we did where literally half the show was just talking about [00:16:00] sponsors. We actually got in trouble with the sponsors for talking about them too much.
[00:16:05]Christina: [00:16:05] That’s our bad that’s because we’re bad
[00:16:09] Brett: [00:16:09] I got good feedback from listeners though. Who thought it was very entertaining that I went into, uh, like off on tangents during a kitty poo read or talking about like separate beds when we were, yeah.
[00:16:23] Anyway, we’ll keep today’s concise. How’s that?
[00:16:28] Christina: [00:16:28] that. Sounds good.
[00:16:29] Brett: [00:16:29] Uh, audible is the leading provider of spoken word entertainment and audio books ranging from best-sellers and new releases, languages, motivation, and more like original entertainment from top celebrity creators and thousands of popular and binge word. I can say it.
[00:16:48] Binge-worthy podcasts.
[00:16:50] Christina: [00:16:50] Hell yeah.
[00:16:50] Brett: [00:16:50] Their newest plan audible plus gives you full access to the plus catalog. You can listen all you want to thousands of audio books, original [00:17:00] entertainment and podcasts, including ad free versions of your favorite shows and exclusive series. That feels slightly ironic doing an ad in the middle of a show.
[00:17:10] But if we were on audible, you could listen to it without this ad, which would be easy because you’d already have audible.
[00:17:17] Christina: [00:17:17] You’d already have audible and you’d be like what they taught. We were talking about audible. Weird.
[00:17:21]Brett: [00:17:21] you can listen offline anytime, anywhere you can even squeeze in a workout or a guided meditation without having to go to a gym or a class, all you need is a smartphone or a tablet. It will even sync your spot in your audio book or podcasts across devices, including Amazon and Amazon Alexa enabled devices like echos.
[00:17:43] Right now I’m reading a book called Clara in the sun and I can’t, the author’s name is Japanese. I’m gonna, I’m gonna guess. It’s Kazuo Ishiguro, which is probably a hundred percent wrong, but the book has me [00:18:00] completely hooked. Um, I’m like, it’s been super charming up to this point, but they’ve set up like four different ways that it could go really dark.
[00:18:08] I have no idea how this book ends, but I’m absolutely riveted. Um, actually have like four books going right now at once. Uh, I was jumping around, but Clara and the sun has me riveted. Um,
[00:18:23] Christina: [00:18:23] I’m I’m listening to truth lies and O-rings inside the space shuttle challenger disaster.
[00:18:28] Brett: [00:18:28] Oh, wow. That sounds intense.
[00:18:31] Christina: [00:18:31] It is it’s 26 hours.
[00:18:33] Brett: [00:18:33] Who wrote it?
[00:18:34] Christina: [00:18:34] Uh, it’s written by Alan J. McDonald and James R. Hansen. And it’s considered like one of the, like it’s considered like the definitive, um, kind of like investigation into the challenger disaster, which, um, I’ve been obsessed with since I was 10 years old and I was born like a year before it happened.
[00:18:54] So, uh, it’s one of those things that, um, I, uh, shouldn’t be [00:19:00] like totally obsessed with, but yet have been for weird reasons my whole life. So it’s really good. Yeah.
[00:19:07] Brett: [00:19:07] Yeah, I was in grade school. We were watching it on a TV in the classroom.
[00:19:12] Christina: [00:19:12] Yeah, so many kids were, which is horrifying. Um, it’s actually interesting, like fun note and then we’ll end our a read. It’s why Peggy Lipton still has a career because she wrote Reagan’s famous and very good speech that he gave after the disaster that was like considered one of the best political speeches of the last 50 years.
[00:19:32] Brett: [00:19:32] Fascinating. So anyway, yeah. Audible helps people get more stories and information you can listen while working from home cooking, exercising on a walk as a family activity, or just relaxing listening helps people feel connected and inspired. Audible can also help with your personal goals, whether you want to learn something new, get more books in your life while doing other things focus on mind and body wellness, or simply enjoy a well-deserved diversion.
[00:20:00] [00:20:00] You set your own goals and let audible help you reach them. You can get a 30 day free trial by visiting audible.com/overtired. Or by texting tired, two five zero zero five zero zero. Or as the kids say 500, 500 with everything you want to listen to all in one app audible plus can truly become your playlist for life.
[00:20:22] It definitely has for me, I don’t even listen to music in my car anymore. I’m like all audio books. So visit audible.com/overtired or text overtired to five zero zero five zero zero. We’re both obviously big fans of audible and it is awesome to have them as a team. What else should we talk about?
[00:20:41] Christina: [00:20:41] Okay. Now we get to finally talk about the real news, like congrats on your job and everything. That’s awesome.
[00:20:45] Brett: [00:20:45] Whatever, whatever Taylor Swift, blah, blah, blah.
[00:20:48] Christina: [00:20:48] exactly, exactly. Taylor Swift one, uh, like record for a woman anyway. Um, third album of the year, Grammy for folklore. [00:21:00]
[00:21:00]Brett: [00:21:00] Yay.
[00:21:02] Christina: [00:21:02] No, that’s a big deal. I know it was a good album. I know you didn’t like the album as much and that, that you thought it was sad,
[00:21:07] Brett: [00:21:07] No, just to be fair. I don’t care about any Grammys.
[00:21:10] Christina: [00:21:10] I don’t
[00:21:11] Brett: [00:21:11] not a dis on Taylor specifically,
[00:21:14] Christina: [00:21:14] I really don’t care about them either to be honest, except she cares so much and she’d be like pretends, like she doesn’t, but we have, especially if you watched her documentary, which you have to watch because it’s really good. Uh, but if you watch miss Americana, like, it is very much like a, uh, uh, uh, psyche, like, like profile of her, like, you know, we’ve spent years like dissecting her like emotional problems.
[00:21:39]Brett: [00:21:39] professionally. Yes.
[00:21:41] Christina: [00:21:41] Right. The documentary does that, like it says just as well, all I’m saying is, turns out we weren’t wrong, Brett, on a lot of our stuff with her. So, um, w which makes me love her more because I’m like, yes, all the things I picked up on that like, I love her for is very much accurate [00:22:00] into completely. No, she, but, uh, she one, um, I didn’t know she was going to win or not because the Wars were weird this year.
[00:22:07] A it’s a weird year. Did you awards in general? Because it feels like the last year didn’t happen and so much stuff that came out of like art is weird. Uh that’s actually why, I’m glad she won because so many of the other albums that were nominated for album of the year, either came out, you know, before the pandemic started or were clearly started before the pandemic did and like sound like normal albums and don’t.
[00:22:33] In any way, like, feel like they were products of like, what actually happened in 2020, which to me, I’m sorry, is disconcerting that the song of the year was, is it’s called, um, I can’t breathe. And it, it was, you know, very much an illusion to, um, all of the, um, you know, uh, police violence against, um, um, uh, black people.
[00:22:53] Um, but that was from a relatively unknown, um, songwriter or [00:23:00] her who was very good, but like that song, you know, has zero radio play and zero, uh, kind of name recognition and whatnot. Um, whereas folklore, um, even if I think if you, you didn’t like it, I think L might have liked it more than you did, but like it’s, um, very much a product of, of.
[00:23:19] Isolation and pandemic. And like, you feel all that with that. So I was, so I was really glad that, that at one, but she was nominated for five awards. She only won that one. And that’s why that’s one of the things that’s weird is that not always do people sweep it like last year, for instance, Billie Eilish won the big, um, like she went across the board, she won the whole like category.
[00:23:38] She went and record album song, um, and, um, uh, like think like pop vocal, like she got like all of the categories and, um, Taylor was, uh, nominated for five. She only won that one. So it was a different person who run record of the year artists at the year, um, or not ours, the Euro record of the year song of the year and, um, uh, [00:24:00] um, album of the year.
[00:24:01] So all of those were different, which is not common. You usually have, um, some sort of like at least somebody repeating and one of those things, Beyonce queen B also, uh, one’s Grammy’s N she always gets shut out of the major categories, which is weird and. There’s definitely a racial component to that, but she is now the most or tied as the most awarded Grammy person, like ever performer anyway, like she’s 27 now, um, which she deserves every single one, but, uh, yeah, I was worried that Taylor wasn’t going to win and they had her in the front row.
[00:24:38] So it was weird because they only had the attendees present for what categories they were up for. So it wasn’t the typical thing where like they did it outdoors and they presumably had some people in crowds. They had weird crowd noise, but it was very clearly like a laugh tracky clap tracky thing. It didn’t make a lot of sense.
[00:24:57] It was, it was, I didn’t love it. [00:25:00] Um, but they had like these tables, they were outside of like the staple center and they were all, you know, separated by, you know, six feet and every person, even though they’re outdoors was wearing masks and they were able to be there with like one other person at their table.
[00:25:13]And it was a different setup for each nomination for each major category that they were presenting or whatever. And so they had her in the front and I was like, are they going to have her in the front and then have her lose? Like, that’s pretty shitty, right? Like that’s not cool. And then, and then part of you was like, Oh no, but they wouldn’t do that to her.
[00:25:32] Cause she even came and performed and her performance was really good. And I was like, no, they wouldn’t do that to her. And like, unlike a lot of the other rewards where they will bring out the price, Waterhouse, Cooper people to like, be like the integrity of this, you know, uh, award is, is, uh, this and that.
[00:25:46] And we haven’t seen the results and we don’t know. And, and we know that because when they made the flub and the Oscars, um, four years ago, one of the greatest live TV moments ever when they announced the wrong winner for best [00:26:00] picture as law land and it turned out to actually be, um, um, for, um, what was it, a midnight?
[00:26:06] Um, uh,
[00:26:07]Brett: [00:26:07] Are you waiting for me to fill in the blank? Cause I can’t.
[00:26:11] Christina: [00:26:11] Yeah, I’m I’m at best picture 2016. Um, is, uh, now the
[00:26:18] Brett: [00:26:18] They died cowboy.
[00:26:19] Christina: [00:26:19] No, it was Moonlight. That’s it? I’m sorry. I could see the poster in my head. It was Moonlight. Um, so, so when they made that flub, like the reason that they could do that is because the crew had no idea. Like the producers don’t know who wins the Grammys I’m 98% sure is not like that.
[00:26:41] Like, it’s not one of those things where like, MTV, they absolutely know the winners in advance I’m, but I’m pretty sure, like, and everybody involved knows the winners in advanced. I’m pretty sure that they call people in are like, we’re not going to tell you what you won, but you won something. Will you please show up?
[00:26:57] But the Grammys, [00:27:00] somebody, I feel like in the control room at least like knows. I think, I feel, I feel, I feel, I don’t want to like definitively say that. So that was the one thing in my mind. I was like, Oh, they wouldn’t put her up front just to like have her lose because she would never show up again.
[00:27:17] Cause she’s petty like that. But no, but she won and I was very excited also her performance, which is like a medley of songs from folklore and evermore. Very good. It was, I, um, it was not the wop form of performance, which was interesting. Uh, and uh, one of those things that I did actually questioned, I was like, okay, Janet Jackson got canceled for, you know, showing like curb boob for a quarter of a second and this which there’s no nudity.
[00:27:44] And to be clear, I didn’t have a problem with her performance, but it was very, very, very MTV. And I’m like, this is this sort of thing that normally would get people like upset, but I don’t think anybody watched. So I don’t think there was a lot of outrage. So, so Taylor won. [00:28:00] Yay.
[00:28:00] Brett: [00:28:00] Hey, did we get through Taylor?
[00:28:03] Christina: [00:28:03] Shut up. This is important to me and to our, and our listeners, our listeners care about our tailored discourse. No, yes, we’re. We’re done with Taylor.
[00:28:10] Brett: [00:28:10] I can name at least two listeners who, who asked me to let them know when we have Taylor free episodes so they can go listen,
[00:28:18] Christina: [00:28:18] Awesome. Great. They can skip through that. If we put in chapter markers, they can shift through
[00:28:22] Brett: [00:28:22] It’s two people.
[00:28:24] Christina: [00:28:24] That’s like half our audience.
[00:28:25] Brett: [00:28:25] Oh, stop. That’s not true.
[00:28:28] Christina: [00:28:28] I know. I
[00:28:29] Brett: [00:28:29] We have tens of hundreds of listeners. Yeah. I, I have watched more of the Brittany Spears documentary than I have of the, uh, Taylor Swift documentary. And I haven’t watched the Billie Eilish documentary.
[00:28:45] Christina: [00:28:45] I know we were both supposed to watch that, but you had work stuff and I had work stuff. Um, the Billy one I’ve heard is really good. There’s also a Demi Lovato one that I’m kind of excited about. And I hate to me Lavato laminate is great,
[00:29:00] [00:29:00] Brett: [00:29:00] Yeah, I know. I’m just saying as long as we were talking about like music, music related
[00:29:06] Christina: [00:29:06] Well, I didn’t expect, I’m going to be honest with you. I didn’t expect you to see lemonade.
[00:29:09]Brett: [00:29:09] I would this, we, we talk about Beyonce so little on this podcast. I feel like we’re doing a disservice, but I’ll be honest. I’ve never listened to an entire Beyonce song.
[00:29:22] Christina: [00:29:22] I was going to say you don’t, you’re not like this is our generational, like, this is our excuse. We’re close in age, but we’re not like, this is where our generational gap happens because Beyonce is like a year older than me. So she and I are firmly of like the same era and like, You’re you were just past that, like you just, you were never Destiny’s child you and you certainly would not have even entertained pop music when Destiny’s child was a thing like you would, you would have not even
[00:29:47] Brett: [00:29:47] you know, I got into like TLC a little bit.
[00:29:50] Christina: [00:29:50] yeah,
[00:29:51] Brett: [00:29:51] at least I could at least enjoy their songs that like high school dances.
[00:29:55] Christina: [00:29:55] Well, that’s what I’m saying, but by the time you’re out of high school. So imagine like five years after TLC, [00:30:00] would you want to listen to like a
[00:30:03] Brett: [00:30:03] I didn’t have high school dances anymore.
[00:30:05] Christina: [00:30:05] This is what I’m saying, right? So like you missed, this is my point also, and this is, and I have nothing but love for Destiny’s child and, and queen Beyonce herself, but TLC was a better group.
[00:30:17] Like they were more talented because the trio was talented. Whereas Destiny’s child, the joke was yeah, well, and the joke was, cause they kept firing numbers, which is hilarious. Uh, and, uh, and honestly, some of the reasons that those girls were fired was fucked up because her dad was the manager and her mom made their costumes.
[00:30:36] And the only other girl who was in it the whole time is her cousin. And like, it was, but it was clear from the beginning. Like, I mean, and I feel bad because I don’t want to be like, you knew what you got into. Cause like some of these girls got into it when they were like 11 years old. So like, no, you didn’t know what you got into, but your parents maybe should have.
[00:30:54] And I don’t want to even say how many parents would have that, like awareness, but it’s one of those things where I think [00:31:00] everybody was kind of like clean. They were like, no, like, um, This is the Beyonce show and the rest of you are our backgrounders and maybe you’ll get like a chance to sing a verse every now and then.
[00:31:11] Right. But like the reason why she was cast so perfectly in dream girls is because that is like the, you know, um, the story of the Supreme is essentially, and she is Diana Ross in that group. Right. Like she, like she was, um, but, um, I guess, I guess, uh, uh, let’s WIO would have been the, um, Effie, but anyway, I’m going to stop that analogy.
[00:31:35] But, um, so yeah, but you just barely missed said no, but, but TLC is better because they, um, a, they wrote their own music where they didn’t write all of it, but they wrote some of it like, like, uh, Lisa wrote her wraps and they were more involved in that. Whereas, you know, Destiny’s child was very much singing songs that other people had written in that were, would sound good with their voices.
[00:31:55] And there’s nothing wrong with that, but that’s just, that is a difference. And they [00:32:00] were, um, There’s an edge to TLC that you didn’t have, especially the first two albums that you didn’t have with, uh, Destiny’s child ever. Um, so yeah, and I, but anyway, that’s, that’s, I could, I’m going to stop now because I could actually continue to go on about, um, the discourse with, uh, nineties, um, girl groups, because the only two that really exist, not now, I will actually stop after I finish this thought.
[00:32:27] It’s interesting. I think about it. There are so many boy bands and, and boy groups like that’s goes, goes throughout history, even now, like BTS, like you see it, there are so few girl groups, like there are so few and it’s, uh, the, the two, you know, that I can literally name off the top of my head would be TLC and Beyonce and TLC, um, especially their, their second album, which, uh, sold like.
[00:32:52] 20 million records or something insane is like Seminole. Uh, but, uh, but I also love Destiny’s child and [00:33:00] Ben will never apologize for that because I danced at high school dances to Destiny’s child.
[00:33:06] Brett: [00:33:06] If you want, uh, me and me and the two aforementioned listeners, we can, we can just go for awhile. If you give me a time, we can come back.
[00:33:15] Christina: [00:33:15] Hi, I’m done. I’m sorry.
[00:33:16] Brett: [00:33:16] I forgive you. I
[00:33:17] Christina: [00:33:17] talk about sex stuff now. Let’s
[00:33:19] Brett: [00:33:19] so you know what? I realized that stupid, obvious, but it just dawned on me yesterday
[00:33:24] Christina: [00:33:24] What’s that
[00:33:25] Brett: [00:33:25] for every power tool I own. I have 30. Tiny screwdrivers.
[00:33:32] Like I have a tiny bit for every possible torics and Phillips head, you could imagine, but only
[00:33:40] Christina: [00:33:40] it.
[00:33:40] Brett: [00:33:40] the, Oh, I have multiple, I fix it toolkits. And some of the, I have one of their screwdrivers that like, you can, uh, it has like eight different heads in the handle
[00:33:52] Christina: [00:33:52] Oh,
[00:33:52] Brett: [00:33:52] you like slide the, you slide the driver part out and it pulls the, the bit [00:34:00] back inside and then you rotate the handle.
[00:34:02] And when you push it back, it has a different bit. I love that thing.
[00:34:05] Christina: [00:34:05] Awesome.
[00:34:06] Brett: [00:34:06] Um, and I have one that, uh, it’s just a little pocket screwdriver and it unscrews and on the inside, it holds eight different bits and you, it’s not as cool cause you have to like dump them onto your hand and find the one you want. But it’s very handy.
[00:34:21] I keep it on my desk all the time. I only own two. Three prong extension cords, but I have probably a hundred different USB cables in like eight different formats. I definitely, I could fix your sink. Like I can do it. I can even do some basic car maintenance, but I would rather take apart your computer.
[00:34:45] Christina: [00:34:45] Yeah. Yeah, no, I, I, so it is interesting. Cause I could take apart your computer. I could take apart like your graphics card. Um, I wouldn’t touch your power supply cause like I don’t want to die. Um, cause capacitors and, but [00:35:00] uh, and like stored energy and I don’t want to die, but I couldn’t take apart your sink.
[00:35:06] I couldn’t take apart carburetor. I’m freaked out. Even looking at those things. I think I’ve told you, I might’ve told you this before. Um, the only, it was weird. The thing that finally clicked with me about how like you’ve installed a head unit, like in a car, like if you’re installing like a, like a radio, you know, I guess this wouldn’t be like a Bluetooth, you know, CarPlay unit or whatever, but you know, the old days it used to be like a CD like head unit or whatever that whole process seems so foreign to me until like I finally looked at it and I was like, Oh, so it was like installing a, as a CD rom it’s like in selling a CD drive in a computer and then it was like, yeah.
[00:35:39] I was like, Oh, okay. Now I get it. Like, that was like, that was like the way that I had to put into it. So, um, I’m impressed. You can do both to be honest, but it also seems like all of your repair stuff is you’re like, please let me take apart your electronics.
[00:35:53] Brett: [00:35:53] I grew up with a very handyman mechanical father. Um, I, I should have learned a lot more than [00:36:00] I did, but through us, Moses, I picked up a lot of handiness
[00:36:05] Christina: [00:36:05] Yeah. Um, I wouldn’t say my dad is unhandy, but he’s not handy. Like we had a, uh, he had like a tool, um, like, um, what, what do they call it? Uh, like what’s, what’s the
[00:36:16] Brett: [00:36:16] work bench.
[00:36:17] Christina: [00:36:17] yeah, thank you. He had a work bench in the, in the garage and he had like a wall of tools and he had. You know stuff. Um, but I think that most of it was performative to be honest.
[00:36:28] Cause I don’t ever really recall him fixing anything. Like I guess he could technically if you need it to, but it was like, we’re just going to call someone. Um, he did take the chainsaw to his cast once, which is the most ethic, my dad thing ever. So what happened was he, um, he was hunting deer and he fell from like.
[00:36:49] Uh, 10 or 12 foot, like, um, uh, deer stand hunting, stand, whatever. And he tore the ligaments pretty severely in like his left or right leg. [00:37:00] And, um, he was fine other than like the whole ligament tear thing. And they put them in a cast and he had to shower, you know, with like a bag around it. And it was painful.
[00:37:10] He didn’t like it. And it was a pain in the ass. And you maybe when a week into this and my mom came downstairs and she sees little bits of like white fibers in the carpet and just small ones. Like not even big ones, just like sign, let me see your leg. No sign. Let me see your leg. No, that muscle fucker hobbled his way to the garage, got a chainsaw and cut off his cast because he was like, this is a pain in the ass.
[00:37:37] Um, but, um, yeah, I also, I’m a girl. And not to say that girls can’t be like, just as handy as boys. Cause obviously they can, but we’re in most cases still not socialized to do that. So for me was like, when I was, you know, in my like early teens and I started [00:38:00] getting into computers, that was when I first started taking stuff apart, which is late.
[00:38:04] Cause I, a lot of like boys and some girls too, like we’ll take apart, you know, their gadgets and stuff, much younger. But for me it was like, I need to upgrade the Ram in my computer and I need to put in a faster modem. So I’m going to have to figure out how to do this. So. All right. So, so you, you have all these tools.
[00:38:21] I think that was going to be a lead into your ultimate hacking keyboard.
[00:38:24] Brett: [00:38:24] You know, I, I actually was pondering a segue there. But it, yes, let’s just do that. Let’s say, um, speaking of tiny screws and things that I didn’t have to take apart. So, uh, previously on overtired, uh, you may recall that I had received the ultimate hacking keyboard version too, but it had the wrong bootloader and my options were to take it apart and solder it and, and do stuff with probes that I, I don’t even understand or to send it back to Hungary [00:39:00] and let them do it and send it back.
[00:39:02] So I, I went with the latter option. I got, it only took like a week, uh, this time and I had it back in my hands and I have been using it. And it is, I’m going to be when this is officially out and everyone, uh, can go purchase it. I mean, I guarantee there’ll be behind on orders cause it’s a small company and there’s a big demand, but.
[00:39:24] I will be very excited to talk to talk about this. It is it’s super cool.
[00:39:29] Christina: [00:39:29] Um, so, so can you share anything about it or,
[00:39:31] Brett: [00:39:31] sure. Um, I didn’t think I cared about RGB backlighting, but that is the most like prominent feature of V2. And, uh, so like it has all these different layers, mod keys, and mouse keys and function keys. And when you hold down any of the keys that trigger those layers, the lighting changes to show you not only what keys are assigned to that layer, but what kind of keys?
[00:39:57] So like modifier keys and [00:40:00] a mouse keys and regular keys and a combo keys. Like they all get different colors. So it’s very easy to remember. Cause my model layer is this bizarre collection of like things that mute my sound or skip tracks and things that are arrow keys and things that are mouse, movement keys.
[00:40:18] And it’s really cool to have it like color coded for me. I’m actually really digging that and it has hot swappable switches. So I got blue switches in this one, but what I really want to try are box white switches. I’ve never used box switches of any kind. And I’m very curious about them. So someday after I get bored with these blue switches, I am going to hot swap for box white switches.
[00:40:48]Christina: [00:40:48] That’s awesome. That’s awesome. So, um, the big, and also the big change for you because you weren’t really able to play with us before you’ve you obviously were one of the Kickstarter backers and like early enthusiast at the ultimate hacking [00:41:00] keyboard, the original one. Um, but you didn’t have all of the different, um, mod keys,
[00:41:06] Brett: [00:41:06] The modules they’ll like
[00:41:07] Christina: [00:41:07] The modules, right? Like the thumb modules, but you have them, but you have them now on this one, right? So w w I I’m really curious to hear from your perspective, um, what you think of those, because I know that one of our listeners, like had a really cool setup that we saw, like with his thumb modules of like, with the scrolling stuff.
[00:41:23] And that
[00:41:24] Brett: [00:41:24] pinky modules for like scrolling stuff. Yeah. Um,
[00:41:27] Christina: [00:41:27] just curious, like how you, if you have any of those set up, and if you’ve played with
[00:41:30] Brett: [00:41:30] Yeah, totally. Uh, as, as a beta tester, I’ve taken my responsibility very seriously. Um, the mouse modules are there, there it’s a cool idea. I, they won’t replace my track pad for me. Um, I’d like them for scrolling. Uh, it’s really handy to be able to scroll up and down while I’m at my fingers on the keyboard, but the key cluster module that adds three extra keys by my left thumb.
[00:41:57] That one I love I’ve gotten right now. It’s just [00:42:00] assigned to. Delete backspace and return. And I’ve gotten, uh, used to the delete key cause normally that’s function backspace. So it’s like a, a stretch from pinky to pinky. And now it’s just moving my thumb over an extra inch and I have a delete key and I’ve totally like my muscle memory is registered that, and I don’t have to.
[00:42:23] It’s just cool. It’s fun. Plus you can put those, uh, those three extra keys onto layers. So you can have them do different things with like the modern function layers, uh, which I haven’t developed the muscle memory for all the things I’ve tried yet, but I will like that that module is totally worth having. that module, in addition to three keys, it has a little track ball at the bottom with two buttons. So you can right now I have that set up for scrolling. I don’t use the buttons for clicking, but, uh, it’s kinda it’s all in one. So I don’t need the right hand modules. Uh, I, I, I [00:43:00] think they’re cool. I think some people will we’ll get into them.
[00:43:03] I, they don’t have right now, uh, accelerated squirrel, uh, movement. So like, if you want to move, if you have the track ball module on the right and you want to move your mouse across a 27 inch screen, little thumb movements.
[00:43:18] Christina: [00:43:18] Oh, see. So, so you have to do an individual thing for each one.
[00:43:23]Brett: [00:43:23] what do you mean?
[00:43:24] Christina: [00:43:24] Like, like you have to like flick and then flick again. And the flick again, like you can’t just go in a continuous motion,
[00:43:29] Brett: [00:43:29] Well, I mean, you can, but your thumb only moves so far.
[00:43:33] Christina: [00:43:33] right? No, I mean, I understand that. I’m just saying so, okay. So, so it goes, and then it pauses. So it’s, so it’s not a continuous.
[00:43:38] Brett: [00:43:38] Right.
[00:43:39] Christina: [00:43:39] That that’s what I’m trying to get. Like, cause when you were saying accelerated, I was assuming software accelerated, meaning that you didn’t have that like momentum scroll, like when you scroll down and you can go faster with more force.
[00:43:47] What you’re saying is there’s actually a limit to how far the, how, how the mechanism works.
[00:43:55] Brett: [00:43:55] Yeah. And I think that, I think that it’ll get better. I think they’ll improve on [00:44:00] that. Uh, but my feedback was pretty detailed on what I thought would make it better. Uh, but obviously like I have the modules I have and the software is where it’s at. So we’ll see how those develop. Uh, I think out of the, out of the three, I have a track ball attract point and attract pad module.
[00:44:20] And out of those three, I think I actually liked the track point, the best. Like I never had one of those PCs with like the J key or whatever. It was the little nipple in the middle compact, I think, used to make them.
[00:44:33] Christina: [00:44:33] I know it was a Lenovo.
[00:44:35] Brett: [00:44:35] yeah, I never had one of those. So I had never really used a track point of any kind.
[00:44:39] Christina: [00:44:39] Yeah, I’m not a fan personally,
[00:44:41] Brett: [00:44:41] yeah, if you’re using your thumb though, Attract attract pad. Like the angle gets weird. You actually have to rotate your wrist to get a straight across movement. Uh, and that could be adjusted software, but the track point feels a lot more intuitive [00:45:00] to me.
[00:45:00] Christina: [00:45:00] Yeah, no, I think that, that makes sense. And there are people who like S like swear by the nipple thing, like who loved that and who find the PR have amazing precision with that. I personally was never able to really get into it. I think I got close once. It was one of those things I had to like use, I was reviewing a laptop, I think.
[00:45:19] And I, I like forced myself. And after like the second or third day, I was like, okay, I can kind of get into this, but it was still not something that was gonna be second nature to me, but I could see, like, especially if you’re able to customize it the way that you can with this, that you could, you know, um, customize and, you know, make adjustments in the software that you could make that work for you.
[00:45:38] Brett: [00:45:38] Okay. Uh, so, uh, brain brain switched. Do you fidget?
[00:45:45] Christina: [00:45:45] Oh yeah.
[00:45:46] Brett: [00:45:46] Um, man, I, it has gotten really bad for me lately. I have this, I don’t know when I started doing it, but I, like, I rubbed the back of my fingernails against the Palm of my hand from like bass to fingertip and I go back and [00:46:00] forth and it’s not something I was doing consciously, but it’s become such a habit for me that I got like raw, like it actually hurts and I’ll find myself doing it and realize that I’m doing it.
[00:46:13] And my hands will be like stingy almost from doing it so much. And it’s just a light touch. It’s like a tickle almost. But you do that a thousand times. Oh man, I fidget has gotten bad for me. I need a, I need a new fidget toy.
[00:46:28] Christina: [00:46:28] Yeah. I fidget. And like, part of the reason that I bite my nails or whatever I think is I used to always blame it on anxiety and I’m sure that’s part of it, but I think a bigger part of it is just like, It’s a fidget thing. It’s just one of those things that I do is the same reason. Like there will be like, if I have, like, when I was little, I like this, I try not to do this now, but then usually I don’t have the scaps now, but like, if I would have like a scab or whatever, like, you know, like, you know, like you pick at it, you know, and there are other little things where if I would find like a, a bump on my skin or whatever, I’d be like, okay, I’m gonna like [00:47:00] fixate on that.
[00:47:01] They’re just, they’re things that, um, yeah, I definitely am a fidgeter,
[00:47:05] Brett: [00:47:05] Do you have a fit? Do you have a fidget toy that works for you?
[00:47:09] Christina: [00:47:09] but I should get one. My in general, my fidget toy is my phone. Um, the game threes is really good for me. The game three’s is like my favorite fidget toy. If I’m being totally
[00:47:19] Brett: [00:47:19] Absolutely. I have never been able to let go of threes.
[00:47:23] Christina: [00:47:23] me either, it’s one of my favorites and, and I’m still mad that like, um, uh, you know, uh, what was it like a 20, 48 or whatever, you know, like, like stole it and
[00:47:32] Brett: [00:47:32] But 20, 48 didn’t stick for me. Like I
[00:47:35] Christina: [00:47:35] No me either. I meet you, but it. Is another way as well, because they didn’t have the physics. I think for me, the physics of threes is just the way that it feels and is like springy.
[00:47:45] I don’t know it’s because I need that
[00:47:46] Brett: [00:47:46] is a perfect game
[00:47:48] Christina: [00:47:48] is a perfect game. So threes is one of those that I play in meetings to this day, all the time. Um, and I always have to explain to people and some people are open to this. Some people are absolutely
[00:48:00] [00:48:00] Brett: [00:48:00] better while you’re playing.
[00:48:02] Christina: [00:48:02] Yes. And some people are really open to that and some people are really not.
[00:48:05] And it’s kind of interesting because we are now having in the industry. Uh, and you’ll probably find this out more now that you’re going to be, and maybe you will, maybe you won’t be, maybe you won’t be more on, on, um, like a developer like corporate developer, Twitter, but in corporate developer, Twitter, There are all these conversations about how people work and about mental health and about, um, like ADHD and about other stuff and, um, ADHD, especially for people who’ve been diagnosed as adults has become this really big thing over the last, I would say 18 to 24 months, uh, which, um, is interesting and, and is great for me as someone who’s.
[00:48:43] I mean, I was technically diagnosed as a teenager, but, um, uh, I really didn’t like know that I had it until I was, um, a young adult. Um, you know, like, like probably like the 20, um, I would say that it was clear to me that it was more than just [00:49:00] the fact that, um, the medication was helping counteract some of the side effects that some of the other medications and that I’d kind of had this latent ADHD newness.
[00:49:11] My whole life just cause my perfectionism hit it so well. But, um, so it’s been great for me to like add these conversations cause you and I have obviously been very open about talking about our own struggles, um, and coping mechanisms for years. But now it’s becoming this weird industry conversation, which is great.
[00:49:26] But the hilarious thing is, is that a bunch of employers and people all want to be like, woke about it and woke about like how you can be accommodating to people with it. But I have still run into situations, obviously less working from home because people can’t see you unless you turn your camera on.
[00:49:42] But I have run into situations where, cause I always explained to managers and I did this at, in journalism jobs, done the separate room. Like, Hey, if I’m on my phone and I’m not looking at you, I’m so sorry. I know that’s rude, but this is literally the only way I can concentrate. Like this is how I deal with this.
[00:49:58] And you can ask [00:50:00] me, you know, follow up questions. I assure you I’m listening. If I’m not in it’s, you know, becoming like a thing, then we can talk about it. But like. This, this is my accommodation. This is what I need. And some people have been open to it. Some people like I would say most people probably don’t believe me when I say that.
[00:50:14] Right. I would say the, the initial reaction from most people, managers, people that I’ve told that to is that they say, okay, and then they’re rolling their eyes internally and being like she’s full of shit. And just must be on her phone with a lawyer over time. Is that cause I’ll pipe in and I’ll talk and have full understanding of everything that’s been said is that I’m actually correct.
[00:50:35] And, and that, that I’m focusing on. Exactly. You know, like I said, I was, but there’s some people who just dismiss that out of hand. And I had a manager at my job, um, who. He was kind of dismissive. In fact, when I told him about something, he was like, well, you’re just you like the way he I’d explained it to him early on.
[00:50:54] And when he was talking about how he gave a presentation and people didn’t seem engaged. And I was like, well, you know, I was listening, but I was, you [00:51:00] know, on my phone. Cause that’s what I do. He was like, well, yeah, that’s just like the way he said it about me. I was like, it was really dismissive. And it was really one of those things.
[00:51:07] I was like, this is really, this makes me feel pretty shitty to be honest. Um, so it’s interesting that like we’re now having all these conversations about adult fidget toys and about how we deal with our ADHD and whatnot. But at the same time, there is still, there’s like this latent disconnect, I think between like how accommodating and woken aware people want to appear in public and then how they act in private.
[00:51:33] But I will say it is at least getting better. And the fact that it is becoming like a public conversation that people like want to be on the right side of it is certainly a good thing. It’s certainly one of those things where we’re like. Well, yeah, play your game, play your plate player. Three’s game. Get your fidget toy.
[00:51:49] Brett: [00:51:49] I think in schools too, like I think, uh, like I’ve heard anyway, that teachers are making more accommodations for students who actually are going to [00:52:00] learn better if they’re allowed to fidget with something at their desks, because historically they would take away
[00:52:05] Christina: [00:52:05] they would take that away. Yes, no, they would take it away and they would, they would, it was terrible. Like I used to draw in class. I used to do other things. Like I remember I used to actually, it’s hilarious. And I think back, I used to write my notes backwards and, um, yeah, because that was a way for me to have to do two things at once.
[00:52:25] Like that would be how my brain could like deal with everything happening is I would write my notes backwards, cause that would require an extra layer of concentration and totally, um, all, and then I would get in trouble for writing my notes backwards. Sometimes it’d be like, you’re not reading my notes.
[00:52:41] What, what the hell do you care? Um, So this day I can write very well backwards. Uh, but yeah, I remember getting in trouble for playing on my calculator, like in English class and, you know, I’ll be playing Tetris and was like, what is this? And wanting me to answer something I’m like, I already did the reading.
[00:52:59] This is what [00:53:00] we were talking about, you know? And, but I I’d get yelled at. Um, so I’ve heard that too anecdotally, that teachers are being more accommodating, which is great, but yeah. Um, I need a new three’s is my fidget toy that I probably need to get like another one, but I would say my phone
[00:53:12] Brett: [00:53:12] I do feel like we have a fair number of ADHD and, and neuro atypical people in our listenership. So I’m putting on her an official call, let us know on discord or on Twitter. What’s a good fidget toy for adults. Like I just, I need something. That’s not gonna make my hands turn raw.
[00:53:33] Christina: [00:53:33] exactly. Let’s get bread and new fidget toy. Like what can we get him?
[00:53:36]Brett: [00:53:36] I have one that’s like a dodecahedron with like a different kind of like button or switch on every side of it. And it’s kind of perfect, except it’s big enough that it doesn’t make a great little like, like I need something I can just play with, like in my lap without even having to look down. And that fits in the Palm of my hand very [00:54:00] easily.
[00:54:00] I’ll I’ll find something
[00:54:01] Christina: [00:54:01] Would a Rubin, would a Rubix would a Rubik’s cube work?
[00:54:07] Brett: [00:54:07] Don’t I don’t know. Maybe that might actually feel a lot like threes. I’ve never solved the Rubik’s cube in my life. Yeah,
[00:54:16] Christina: [00:54:16] I haven’t either, but I keep seeing it, like, I knew all these YouTube videos where they’ll show people who can solve them, like insanely quickly. And then that excites me cause I’m like, Oh, there’s a pattern involved with this. You just need to learn the pattern. And that is one of those things that, that excites me.
[00:54:29] But I would think even without like solving it, just maybe even the motions of, you know, doing it would be.
[00:54:36]Brett: [00:54:36] yeah. Yeah. What’s your three’s high score.
[00:54:40]Christina: [00:54:40] let me find it.
[00:54:42]Brett: [00:54:42] I will, while you look, I will say that my high score and I’ve gotten, like, I keep getting really close to it, but 187,350 is where I’ve maxed out.
[00:54:56] Christina: [00:54:56] Wow. That is amazing. Yeah. I’m I’m at, uh, [00:55:00] like I’ve only gotten as high as seven 68. So like, as, as my match, I’ve never been able to get past that. So I’m at my, my, my threes is like 30,000.
[00:55:10]Brett: [00:55:10] I’ve hit the three Oh seven two a couple of times.
[00:55:14] Christina: [00:55:14] Wow. Wow. I go so fast. You take your time with it or do you go super fast?
[00:55:18] Brett: [00:55:18] I would say I’m in the, in the middle. Like if I go super fast, it’s going to be a shorter game. If I stop in. And sometimes I just get in this groove where I’m actually in and the times that I get the highest score these times when I’m actually seeing, I’m doing the math ahead of like, I’m seeing that this three could easily become a 24.
[00:55:40] If I move, like, like I’ll see all the pieces and I’ll be able to put them together more than one move and advance, and I’m not just reacting to what’s new on the screen. Um, those are the times that I score really well. And I don’t know how it is. I get into that groove. It just happens
[00:55:58] Christina: [00:55:58] It just happens. [00:56:00] That’s interesting. Yeah. I’ve had that happen a couple of times. Um, I play a lot of match three games as well, and sometimes that’s the same way where you just like, you know, you’re on. And those are obviously, I mean, there’s a chance element to threes as well. Um, but, but, but those are, uh, you know, like, like the big, you know, the, the, the class of games that Bejeweled created and then didn’t really profit from, um, I, I play those games and yeah, there are times when you’re just kind of like, you know, that the game is going to go well, you’re like, you’re like, okay, this is going to be like a high score game.
[00:56:31] Tetris is like that too. Um, I love Tetris, like Tetris is. One of those, like, I’m surprised they haven’t done this. Maybe they have, they probably have, uh, but I’m kind of surprised that they haven’t just made like a handheld version, like, like the old tiger games, things like of Tetris, you know what I mean?
[00:56:49] Cause just I’m, I’m not in favor of single use devices, but I would totally get something like Nintendo could actually introduce stupid. They should just release. [00:57:00] Cause they released this game and watch thing for like their 30th anniversary or whatever and or 35th anniversary or something and Mario’s 35th anniversary or something.
[00:57:11] And I never used the game in wash. I’ve no idea that it was even a real thing. I thought that there were like a watch component to it. It turns out it was just like a clock. I don’t even know. Um, but it was like a really early handheld game kind of thing. And um, they should have just released, they should just release like.
[00:57:29] A game, boy that’s like that, but is smaller. But his style, like the original game boy that has the original Tetris with the original music on it. And it has like a monochrome screen and they should sell it for 50 bucks and they would sell 10 million of them.
[00:57:44] Brett: [00:57:44] You ever played 3d Tetris?
[00:57:46] Christina: [00:57:46] Yes. I love that.
[00:57:48] Brett: [00:57:48] It’s pretty fun. And it makes me think that there should be an AR 3d Tetris by now.
[00:57:55] Christina: [00:57:55] There should, there should, there should definitely be like a, an AR or like a virtual like [00:58:00] Tetris. Yeah. 100%. You’re exactly right. I, Oh my God. An AR Tetris would be so fun because you could move stuff around. That would, Oh my God.
[00:58:09]Brett: [00:58:09] All right. We’re, we’re both quitting our awesome tech jobs and we’re going into, we’re starting a development company to make a, our 3d Tetris and it’s going to be a huge hit and we’re never going to have to worry about money again.
[00:58:21]Christina: [00:58:21] Yeah. Except for the whole licensing of Tetris, but yes.
[00:58:25] Brett: [00:58:25] There’s always something.
[00:58:27]Christina: [00:58:27] But it’s a good idea. We should maybe bring it to those people and be like, Hey, we have this idea. Pay us, you know,
[00:58:34] Brett: [00:58:34] Here’s your nondisclosure agreement and here’s my demands. Um, anyway. All right. We should go.
[00:58:43] Christina: [00:58:43] Yeah, we should go. But, um, huge news for you this week. Congratulations. I’m so happy for you.
[00:58:51] Brett: [00:58:51] Thank
[00:58:51] Christina: [00:58:51] So happy for you and a huge news for Taylor Swift. Most importantly,
[00:58:55] Brett: [00:58:55] Most importantly, yes, I okay. [00:59:00] I’m just gonna, um, yeah. Okay. We’ll we’ll just be happy for Taylor Swift. I don’t have to poopoo on this. I don’t have to be a deck about this.
[00:59:07] Christina: [00:59:07] no, you don’t just, just be happy for Taylor. Like you don’t have to, like, you don’t have to. I mean, look, I think we all kind of agree. Like the institution institutional cream is bullshit, but like
[00:59:14] Brett: [00:59:14] Plus I don’t want to hurt her feelings when she listens to this podcast. So,
[00:59:18] Christina: [00:59:18] This is very true. She’s cause
[00:59:20] Brett: [00:59:20] for listening, Taylor. Congratulations.
[00:59:23] Christina: [00:59:23] congratulations. Taylor, thank you for listening to us.
[00:59:26]No, but for real, um, uh, congrats to you on, uh, on that gig. I’m so excited for you for that. And, uh, also congrats on getting the ultimate hacking keyboard because that’s very exciting.
[00:59:38] Brett: [00:59:38] Oh, you know what we have to talk about next time is mano space fonts with ligatures.
[00:59:43] Christina: [00:59:43] yes, yes. I have many thoughts. I have many thoughts.
[00:59:47] Brett: [00:59:47] I’ll add it to add it to next. Week’s show notes.
[00:59:50] Christina: [00:59:50] There’s a really good one that, um, Microsoft put out that’s from the WSL and the windows terminal team called, um, uh, Cascadia,
[00:59:57] Brett: [00:59:57] Yeah. I’ve been trying that out. Yeah. [01:00:00] I still love jet brains, but yeah, I
[01:00:02] Christina: [01:00:02] do too. I love zipper. I love the jet brains or JetBrains mano, where the hell they call it. I love that one. Um, I like dank. Um, I have a bunch of them, um, cause I’ve been
[01:00:12] Brett: [01:00:12] been at least a couple episodes since we’ve had a good monospace font discussion.
[01:00:17] Christina: [01:00:17] Yeah. It’s been like a year. I feel like. So it’s time for us.
[01:00:21] Brett: [01:00:21] I think it’s been like a few months.
[01:00:24] Christina: [01:00:24] okay. It’s been a few months, but we can talk about this again.
[01:00:27] Brett: [01:00:27] Okay. Deal.
[01:00:28] Christina: [01:00:28] w we’ll talk about it again. I don’t think we got into the ligature conversation really the
[01:00:32] Brett: [01:00:32] feel like, I feel like that might be new ground for us.
[01:00:35] Christina: [01:00:35] Yeah. And then we give the ligature thing. We can also talk about like our feelings on like, um, uh, PS lines and some of the other, like out on scripts and like, where do you fall on that dichotomy?
[01:00:45] Like, is, does it ruin? Cause there are some people who even think ligatures are bad, but there’s, there’s, there’s like a whole purist discussion about like how you add stuff to your, to your monospace bonds and, and with your command line setup, I would love to get into the politics of that with you
[01:00:58] Brett: [01:00:58] Sounds good. [01:01:00] All right, Christina, get some sleep.
[01:01:03] Christina: [01:01:03] get some sleep bread.

Mar 10, 2021 • 1h 8min
230: Bang Terp
Privacy matters are high on the topic list today, what with Google and Brave and all the shenanigans. But so are shells… we got some zsh, some bash, and even some fish. So, to summarize, privacy and shells. We’ve been criticized for taking too long to get to the point, so I want to be as concise as possible. Which I’m ruining by explaining it. Guess I proved their point for them.
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Show Links
EFF On Google targeted advertising
Four Big Questions about Google’s New Privacy Position
Twelve Million Phones, One Dataset, Zero Privacy
Fish shell
Brave buys a search engine
Lynx
DuckDuckGo !bang searches (Seriously, there’s a !terp search)
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Check out more episodes at overtiredpod.com and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Find Brett as @ttscoff and Christina as @film_girl, and follow Overtired at @ovrtrd on Twitter.
Transcript
Brett
[00:00:00] Christina: [00:00:00] You’re listening to overtired. I’m Christina Warren. He’s Brett Terpstra. Hey Brett, how are you?
[00:00:05] Brett: [00:00:05] I, so I’m like in the weeds building this, you know, bunch. My, my like automation app that I’ve been kind of obsessed with. I decided it can run shell scripts. So you should be able to see the output of shell scripts. And so I built this entire system that, uh, not only does it load like your full log-in shell environment, it also converts, uh, like ANSI color codes in your output.
[00:00:34] Two attributed strings that it can display in a nice Menlo presentation. Anyway, I that’s where my brain is right now. So I’ll come around. I’m ADHD. Uh, it’s common symptom is trouble switching tasks. I’ll get there.
[00:00:54] Christina: [00:00:54] you’ll get there. Um, no, but I mean, I think, I think the, I like this, [00:01:00] that, uh, this is where your brain is. And I would honestly, this got us talking about, about shell scripts, uh, or I guess about, Shell’s not shell scripts with shells in general, because you put fish on our list and that was going to be like a later topic.
[00:01:16] But I just want to talk about it now because I really like talking about like shell
[00:01:20] Brett: [00:01:20] jump into tech, just we’ll lose. You lose that portion of our audience right off the bat that
[00:01:26] Christina: [00:01:26] Okay. You’re right. You’re okay. Okay. You’re right. We know. Okay. Well, I was going to say, should we do like the health corner first, but I felt like this was sort of associated with the health corner. Cause like, this is what your mind was on.
[00:01:39] Brett: [00:01:39] Um, You know, let’s I let’s break tradition. Um,
[00:01:44] Christina: [00:01:44] are you sure? Cause we can just go to the health Corps and then come back to fish.
[00:01:47] Brett: [00:01:47] I’m not sure I’m finding, it’s making me uncomfortable, but in my life I’ve I generally go with things that make me uncomfortable because it
[00:01:53] Christina: [00:01:53] no, no, no, no, no, no. Okay. Let’s start with the health corner. Let’s talk about, let’s talk about, let’s talk about the health corner. So
[00:01:59] Brett: [00:01:59] mental [00:02:00] health, I want to, I want to read this line from discord, uh, in regards to last week show.
[00:02:07] Uh, SMA said, um, today’s episode is great. Putting scheduling slash sponsors ahead of sleep is entirely on brand.
[00:02:19] Christina: [00:02:19] Estimate nailed it. Totally. 100% on brand.
[00:02:25] Brett: [00:02:25] you know what I realized this morning? So I didn’t realize I have Tourette, but I realized that so my Tourette shows up in muscle twitches. Um, like I’ll, I’ll get a feeling that I absolutely need to tighten or, or flex a muscle at and like all over my body. But. Primarily in my legs. And I realized while I’m doing tree and yoga this morning, that the, the one thing that always, uh, knocked me over in balance poses is my Tourette’s.
[00:02:58] Like, it never clicked for me [00:03:00] before, but I realized that like I had to twist to be able to flex a muscle in my calf. And that it’s that slight twisting just to Twitch a muscle that ruins my balance poses. It’s it’s a little funny. Yeah. Uh, did you ever see that, uh, uh, when Billy Eilish, she also has threats that manifest much the same way, um, that she, during interviews, she, uh, she’ll wait until the interviewer is asking a question because she assumes the camera will then be on them and she lets out she’ll like, hold in her muscle twitches and then let them out when the camera switches away.
[00:03:43] Uh, but she told that she tells a story about how one time the camera didn’t switch away. So in the middle of like a televised interview, she just went off with her face. It was, yeah. Did you watch the Billie Eilish documentary yet
[00:03:58] Christina: [00:03:58] I haven’t seen it yet. No. [00:04:00] Um,
[00:04:00] Brett: [00:04:00] I want to.
[00:04:01] Christina: [00:04:01] I do as well, because I really, really like her. And I, uh, I ha I have watched, I guess, for like the last four years or however long they’ve been doing it, where she answers the same questions with vanity fair, you know? Um, but, but each year it’s, it’s changed. They got really lucky there because obviously she like broke out big with, with ocean eyes or whatever when they first like, had her for that thing.
[00:04:24] But I mean, that was kind of one of those, you know, Maybe not one in a million, but probably one in 500,000 sort of things where the purse where somebody they already had kind of a relationship with would wind up breaking out the way that she did.
[00:04:40] Brett: [00:04:40] Yeah. Yeah. She deserves it though. I really
[00:04:43] Christina: [00:04:43] He does. I really like her too. I like her brother. I liked them a lot. And,
[00:04:48] Brett: [00:04:48] name? He has a funny name, Denise? Yeah. I mean, not like funny name, but it’s an odd name.
[00:04:56] Christina: [00:04:56] It’s it’s an well, yeah, I mean, it’s, it’s, it’s an uncommon [00:05:00] name for sure. Yeah.
[00:05:01] Brett: [00:05:01] uncommon. So we are we’re recording. His episode is actually going to go up a little late because we’re recording a day late and then hours on top of that, because both of us had psych psychiatry appointments and I, so I ended up canceling. Uh, a second podcast recording yesterday. Like the first one was a scheduling conflict.
[00:05:29] The second one, I found that after my psychiatry appointment, which went great, I was super anxious. Like something about going to see the psychiatrist gets me very, um, riled up. And then I feel like I can’t, I don’t know what it is. I think it’s a tip a general, like, I get the same with going to the doctor.
[00:05:53] It’s just like a, a white coat syndrome kind of thing.
[00:05:56] Christina: [00:05:56] Oh, I can see that. Okay.
[00:05:58] Brett: [00:05:58] But yours was just this morning and you’re [00:06:00] clearly, uh, you’re clearly holding it together better than I,
[00:06:04] Christina: [00:06:04] Well, I think the difference too, I’ve been with this shrink, uh, except for like my dark period when I ghosted him for so long that. I don’t have, I don’t know. I mean, you know, it, it, it’s close to 20 years at this point, so it’s been such a long standing relationship that I don’t have, I guess maybe some of the anxiety that you might have from a normal doctor appointment sort of thing.
[00:06:33] I don’t know.
[00:06:34] Brett: [00:06:34] What? Yeah, no, there was the psychiatrist that I saw for, like, it must’ve been. Eight to 10 years, uh, before he retired, I was comfortable with, I never got freaked out, going to see him. Uh, it was after that when like the next doctor cut my meds and, uh, left me with this like, fear of going
[00:06:56] Christina: [00:06:56] right. I was going to say now,
[00:06:58] Brett: [00:06:58] what’ll happen.
[00:06:59] Christina: [00:06:59] I was going to say, [00:07:00] now you have like a very real fear response. Right? And so you go into it kind of with this, you know, like almost PTSD sort of thing. And then you have, you know what I mean? And then it’s like, okay, we, you get out of it and you feel like the sense of relief, but you’ve had this anxiety and this.
[00:07:16] This pent up, like uncertainty going into it. Like, I can totally see that, like I’m, I’m my shrink is going to my psychiatrist. He’s going to retire at some point he’s 75. It’s going to be sooner than later, and I’m going to need to find someone and I’m not looking forward to that. I don’t even know how I’m going to handle that because, you know, uh,
[00:07:36] Brett: [00:07:36] Yeah,
[00:07:37] Christina: [00:07:37] you know, like,
[00:07:38] Brett: [00:07:38] know the feeling.
[00:07:39] Christina: [00:07:39] No.
[00:07:39] I mean, and it’s one of those things that like, okay, that actually makes me anxious. Right? Like thinking about things that like make me anxious, that makes me anxious thinking about finding a new person, because it is such a, as we’ve discussed on this show for years, like it is one of those things that will make or break.
[00:07:54] I think anybody’s mental health treatment plan is what, um, doctor you have [00:08:00] and or what counselor you’re talking to because I’ve had bad ones. And I’ve had good ones and I’ve been lucky that I’ve had two good ones and I’ve had a whole bunch of bad ones and many of them are not good. Right. It’s just one of those things where, especially with the state of, of medicine being what it is and, and how insurance things work, it’s not easy to find somebody good.
[00:08:24] And, and it’s, what’s stressful to me about this, which is going to be different whenever I have to do this again, different about when I did last time is I’ve never done this as an adult. I had the, in many ways, I’m not saying it was in any way positive, cause it certainly wasn’t. But going through a lot of this stuff as a kid, as a teenager, the one upside was that, you know, you do have a sense of like time to experiment because, okay, I missed a bunch of school and I had other things and like that’s bad, but it’s not as if [00:09:00] you can’t take those days or take that time to find it.
[00:09:03] Whereas as an adult, it’s like, I need to find someone who will get me my meds, and then maybe I can try to figure out like the, the better. Alignment of who the right person is. Um, and I guess I had to do that as a kid, too. There were people that I saw, like I called a guy in my phone, like Dr. Kevorkian. Um, although, you know, that wasn’t like an accurate thing.
[00:09:24] He was just, he was useless. Uh, he was just basically a grant, saw a guy who he called Dr. Worksheet. And that’s basically what this guy was. He would just write me my meds and. So it’s like, okay, you can find like a stop gap for that. But if you want to find a real person like that takes time and effort and energy, and that can be very much the equivalent of a full-time job in and of itself, just to try to find the right doctors.
[00:09:49] Brett: [00:09:49] Yeah. Yeah. Uh, at least you have options where I live. I have the hospital. Like the mental health division of the [00:10:00] hospital, which has not had an actual psychiatrist. Uh it’s all, all, uh, Pete PAs. Is that the word I’m looking for?
[00:10:09] Christina: [00:10:09] Yeah, physician’s assistance.
[00:10:11] Brett: [00:10:11] like they haven’t had a full-on doctor for probably five years now. They can’t hold on to anybody.
[00:10:18] Um, In fact, not, probably not since my doctor retired, who I was seeing through there, but then we have a mental health clinic that has two psychiatrists, which are, um, I w I at best, there they are. Okay. That’s where I’m going now. And my doctor is okay. Uh, I would say I never feel really terribly listened to, um, Or beyond that you have to go out of town.
[00:10:47] Like I there’s really no shopping around to do, which sucks. The nearest, the nearest, if I have to go out of town, it’s at least a half hour drive to the [00:11:00] next option. I don’t want to do that. I don’t like driving that much.
[00:11:07] Christina: [00:11:07] I fancy that, although half an hour, I don’t know. This is just me growing up places where, and living places where traffic is terrible. I’m like a half an hour is whatever. Like I did actually live very close to my psychiatrist for a number of years. Although when I started seeing him, I don’t believe I lived that close to him.
[00:11:25] And so he was literally almost across the street. And so it was when he, I could like walk to his office, but, uh, you know, many of my other doctors. Growing up anyway, it was different when I was in college. And then after, because I lived in, in the city, but it was not uncommon to have to, you know, drive into, you know, Atlanta proper to go to like the specialist that I would go to.
[00:11:49] Brett: [00:11:49] I can’t do traffic anymore. I’m so used to like in, in, in Wynnona, uh, it takes 10 minutes to get anywhere and rush hour means it takes like 12 minutes. [00:12:00] It’s, it’s ridiculously small and there’s ridiculously few cars on the road. And I that’s one of my top three things about why I want to live in a small town.
[00:12:13] Christina: [00:12:13] No, that makes sense. I mean, I definitely, I don’t like cars. I don’t like driving, but, uh, I don’t really have like a choice in terms of, you know, I need to take Uber or whatever I can walk and I guess, you know, public transit will be. Or I’ll feel more comfortable at public transit once I’ve had a vaccine, uh, which who knows when that’s going to be what’s the, what’s the rollout or what’s kind of the update process.
[00:12:35] How are things going in Minnesota with the vaccine rollout?
[00:12:37] Brett: [00:12:37] um, they’re still mostly doing old people in frontline workers, but I signed up for their, uh, the government has a vaccine tracker. They call it it’ll basically keep you informed as, as, uh, stuff becomes available and you can enter like comorbidities and stuff that you have. Uh, and as, as, as the vaccine becomes available for [00:13:00] people in your group of vulnerable vulnerability, uh, they’ll send you a text message.
[00:13:06] And so now I sit and wait, L is fully vaccinated.
[00:13:10] Christina: [00:13:10] That’s awesome. That’s that’s so good. So she, she got the Pfizer one, right?
[00:13:15] Brett: [00:13:15] I think it was Madrona.
[00:13:16] Christina: [00:13:16] Madrona. Okay. Yeah. That’s the one that my parents got. So did like her arm hurt after the second dose? Yeah. Okay.
[00:13:22] Brett: [00:13:22] days. Um, you want to, she, she got her new job. Do you wanna hear about her new job?
[00:13:28] Christina: [00:13:28] I totally want to hear about her new job.
[00:13:30] Brett: [00:13:30] know how she’s into knitting? Maybe you don’t know, but she’s
[00:13:33] Christina: [00:13:33] Well, I remember you telling me that she’s into that.
[00:13:35] Brett: [00:13:35] when she was sick and dealing with Lyme, uh, she got into knitting and it became like, I would say a passion. She, she, she’s very passionate about knitting and she makes amazing stuff like.
[00:13:47] I’ve known people who have knitted for, you know, most of their lives and are not creating stuff as cool as I think, but also I love her to death, so maybe I’m biased. But anyway, she, uh, there, there [00:14:00] a job opened up at a local, uh, yarn store called yarn analogy. And so she, she applied and, uh, went through the process.
[00:14:11] Uh, it w once they kind of got down to brass tacks, it didn’t sound like they would be able to pay her enough, but they, they texted her the next day or emailed her and said, Hey, we crunched some numbers. We can match what you’re making now. And I got to tell you she’s been there about a week and she is so happy.
[00:14:31] Like she comes home laughing every day. And at her previous job, working with, uh, loud non-verbal people and, uh, direct care stuff. She came home tired and stressed and, uh, smelling like Febreeze, which with her chemical sensitivity required like an immediate shower after getting home. Things are so different.
[00:14:53] It’s like night and day. She’s so much happier. Now,
[00:14:56] Christina: [00:14:56] Yay. I’m so happy to hear this. Yay for [00:15:00] neurology and yay for El. Like this is great.
[00:15:02] Brett: [00:15:02] speaking of new jobs, I applied for one,
[00:15:05] Christina: [00:15:05] Okay.
[00:15:06] Brett: [00:15:06] um, Oracle has started a developer relations team.
[00:15:13] Christina: [00:15:13] Uh huh.
[00:15:14] Brett: [00:15:14] they’re, uh, they’re I talked to the, the head of it and they’re basically fighting against like Oracle’s 40 years of, um, yeah. Uh, the old guard and they’re working to try to build something that can make Oracle relevant for another 40 years.
[00:15:33] And they’re looking for, uh, content writers, uh, content editors. And developer advocates and kind of the job positions they have are kind of a mix of all, all of those things. And, uh, uh, Victor from two are actually. Hooked me up with, uh, the guy at Oracle. Uh, we had a good chat and he, he spent a few days [00:16:00] reading my entire blog apparently and said that he, he thought I’d be a great addition to the team.
[00:16:05] And so I sent her an application and I, I dunno, man, I don’t know if I want a day job, but also. It sounds like a fun job doing interesting things. And I bet it would pay better than being an independent developer right now.
[00:16:23] Christina: [00:16:23] It would definitely pay better and you would get better benefits, which would be good for some of your other stuff. Uh, also as somebody who is a developer advocate, like it’s a fun job. I mean, it’s a lot of what the stuff that you’ve been doing naturally for years, honestly, like your blog is a great resume for, um, you know, um, developer relations because all the side projects and stuff you build, right?
[00:16:45] Like,
[00:16:46] Brett: [00:16:46] and I I’ve become over like 10 years of writing my blog and writing for like Mac stories and Macworld, um, and to, uh, Like I’ve, I’ve learned to very, uh, very easily [00:17:00] predict what people aren’t going to understand, what people are going to be offended by what people are going to have questions about.
[00:17:08] And I can write in such a way that I can explain things, um, uh, proactively to, to make I can break very clearly, but I can write in, uh, an informal tone. That still conveys information very clearly. And that’s not like that’s a learned skill and I’ve been in the weeds on that.
[00:17:31] Christina: [00:17:31] It’s a learned skill, but it’s also one I’m going to argue. I think that there’s part of it. That is an innate thing. Like being able to being a good explainer, like you can definitely learn it and you can become better at it, but there are. People who are more predisposed to do it than others. And, and I think the people who are more predisposed tend to be the people who find a way to do it naturally.
[00:17:49] Like, you know, even going back to your, your, your two off in download squad, blogging days, like when you and I met, like that had an element of that to it. Right. But everything you’ve done for your personal blog and for the other places [00:18:00] you’ve written definitely has like, you nail that tone. I mean, I would say the same for myself.
[00:18:05] You’re, you’re better than I am in terms of. You know, like your, your technical ability, but I feel like I’m very good at breaking down complicated things. And I know an understanding, like you said, what people are going to need context about and what people are gonna need information about. And that is a, it is a learned thing, but it is also one of those things.
[00:18:25] I think that there are people who are good at it naturally are drawn to those things like that was me doing journalism. And I think this is why it was an easy transition for me into developer relations. Because we talked about this on systematic, because a lot of it is like, just kind of knowing your audience and knowing how to explain something.
[00:18:44] Um, like in, in my interview with Microsoft, my, what I white boarded was, how did, how would you break down a complicated story? And I, I broke down because it didn’t, it just happened. I had written a very complicated story about, uh, [00:19:00] the then, um, Oh, I guess he still is. He’s in jail now. He was recently sent back or whatever, but the, uh, de facto head of Samsung was involved in this scandal with the then prime minister of South Korea.
[00:19:15] And there’s all this shiny ball stuff. And it was very complicated and it was one of those things where, um, I knew the story was interesting and I pitched it to my editors and was originally they kind of dismissed it. And then they came back a couple, like a month or so later. And they’re like, Oh no, we want this story written now.
[00:19:33] And I was like, well, mother fucker, God, you know, cause it was really complicated and it was one of those things where we had to explain. I had to explain the shy ball system. I had to explain the, uh, different, uh, w which is unique to South Korea and how their corporations work. I had to explain the infighting happening within the Lee family, in which control Samsung had to explain the different bribery and other, um, you know, like, um, uh, you know, like, [00:20:00] uh, corruption scandals happening within the government.
[00:20:03] You know, there were like all these moving parts and. Had to kind of weave it into a way that people who weren’t deeply in the weeds could do it. And some of it too was because as I’d kind of gone down the rabbit hole, that’s why I’d want to try the story to begin with. Like I had to learn about that stuff myself, which is also a thing that is frequently, at least for me.
[00:20:21] And I think for you too, like we, we have a problem we need to solve from a development standpoint. You go down the rabbit hole, you’re figuring out what you’re doing, and then you have to kind of figure out a way, okay. How do I now explain this to other people so they can see the value in what you’re doing?
[00:20:37] So,
[00:20:38] Brett: [00:20:38] do you think ADHD helps you at all? Yeah, me too. I feel like part of like, part of the reason that I write clearly and succinctly is because I’m always thinking about what I be able to read through this. And I don’t have a high capacity for long articles. Like anything that re anything that’s more than like three pages of a desktop display, [00:21:00] text I’m out.
[00:21:01] Like I’ll never make it to the end. Um,
[00:21:03] Christina: [00:21:03] no problem with long articles, but yeah, I feel like. My ADHD helps me with that. Um, maybe being succinct or being understandable. I don’t know. I think part for me, I always use not so much now because she’s not like the perfect muse for this, but for the stuff that I did at Mashable and Gizmodo and when I would go on CNN and other places and whatever, and I would need to explain like a really complicated.
[00:21:29] Technical topic too. It means you’re mining is that always like use my mom as kind of my guide. I was like, okay. How, how would you explain this to your mom? How would you, how would I explain this? Cause she’s smart, but she’s not an expert in it.
[00:21:41] Brett: [00:21:41] I use El now because she has an amazing capacity for learning things that are well outside of her wheelhouse, but they need to be like a lot of times if I’m explaining something tech, there’s this whole backstory that she
[00:21:55] Christina: [00:21:55] She needs the context.
[00:21:57] Brett: [00:21:57] And like, I that’s, one of the skills I’ve [00:22:00] developed over time is to kind of backup and say, what do you need?
[00:22:03] To understand this. What, what groundwork do you need first?
[00:22:07] Christina: [00:22:07] Yeah, I agree. Yeah. Um, and I think, um, Ella, my mom would get along really well. Like they, they have similar like hearts, like Intel, which are very good ones. And, um, like, like L my mom has a huge capacity for learning things outside of her wheelhouse, but. Which is odd. I always buy, like, it was never a derogatory thing.
[00:22:27] I think people they go, you’re using your mom as your thing. And like, no, my mom is awesome. Like, but my mom is not a technical, um, person in the traditional sense, but she’s smart and she can understand things. So I just need to use, okay. Like, how, how would I, how would I talk to her about this? And, and I think that, you know, and I have a different person kind of in mind, uh, it’s not usually a single person.
[00:22:49] It’s, it’s kind of a group of people when I’m talking or writing about developer focus stuff, especially if it’s more of like beginner content or people who aren’t familiar, as you said, with the [00:23:00] context and, um, and knowing what that line is. Is something that I think you only learn from experience, which you have from the years you’ve been doing that.
[00:23:09] And I think that’s one of those things that is really important in developer relations, because you do have people who come from all across the gamut, you have people who are really experienced in a certain area. You also have newcomers. You have people who just dabble in and out and are just trying to get the documentation and figure out how to do it.
[00:23:25] And don’t really care for the preamble. They just want to know the brass tacks, do people who are, you know, students or career switchers who are learning. If people who. Do you actually care about the depth? You know, like there are those different people and you just need to know that line about like where you go.
[00:23:40] And I feel like your blog does a really good job being conversational and authentic and, um, understandable. And, and I think the most important thing is it feels approachable. Like even if like I read your blog and I’ve been reading your blog, you know, for as long as we’ve been friends and. What I’ve always loved about your writing is that there’s some stuff that [00:24:00] even if I am like, okay, I couldn’t write and do this stuff with bunch that you’re doing.
[00:24:05] Like, I wouldn’t be able to do that code myself, but reading about what you’re doing with it. And listening to you talk about it and talking with you about it week to week, I can understand it and it feels approachable. So it’s like, okay, this isn’t something that I would do myself, but it doesn’t feel like so out of the realm of my comprehension, right.
[00:24:23] Which, which is important.
[00:24:25] Brett: [00:24:25] Are you ready for an amazing segue first? Thank you. That’s very kind of, you. But also, are you ready for an amazing segue?
[00:24:32] Christina: [00:24:32] I’m totally ready for him. And he seems segue.
[00:24:35] Brett: [00:24:35] Speaking of short things that are well explained and, and are interesting. Oh, I feel like I had it better in my head, but anyway, wouldn’t it be great if there was a pocket size guide that could help you sleep, focus or act better?
[00:24:51] There is. And if you have 10 minutes, Headspace can change your life. I’m doing okay. Right?
[00:24:58] Christina: [00:24:58] That’s fantastic.
[00:25:00] [00:25:00] Brett: [00:25:00] Headspace is your daily dose of mindfulness in the form of guided meditations in an easy to use app. Headspace is one of the only apps advancing the field of mindfulness and meditation through clinically validated research Headspace meditation start at just one minute, each speaking of short things, uh, they even have a set of walking meditation, so they’re easy to fit into the busiest schedules.
[00:25:24] Headspace is proven to help you feel better. Their approach to mindfulness can reduce stress, improve, sleep boost, focus, and increase your overall sense of wellbeing. Whatever the situation Headspace really can help you feel better. If you need some help falling asleep. Headspace has wind down sessions.
[00:25:41] Their members swear by. I do I concur with this ad read the wind down sessions are great when I’m not in a, when I’m not in a place where I can listen to an audio book. Or like, I won’t absorb it. These wind down meditations are awesome. [00:26:00] Um, and on the other side of sleep, you’ll find the, uh, the wake up, which is daily original content intended to inspire your day from the moment you wake up.
[00:26:09] And if you’re feeling overwhelmed, Headspace even has three minute SOS meditations that you can do anytime you need it. I did air quotes for SOS. Nobody could see that, but I feel like it came through
[00:26:22] Christina: [00:26:22] I think so. I think it did.
[00:26:24] Brett: [00:26:24] So I used to think that my mind was too busy to meditate. I thought that someone with ADHD and crazy manic episodes couldn’t be still enough to do it.
[00:26:33] It turned out that I was exactly the kind of person who could benefit from meditation. And Headspace really helped me find my groove. I had, I had the great courses, a mindful meditation, like given to me, gifted to me. And it was like, 80 hours long. There’s no way, no way, but 10 minute meditations that can kind of ease you into it.
[00:26:59] Super [00:27:00] easy. Um, Headspace is backed by 25 published studies on its benefits. 600,500 views. And over 60 million downloads. Headspace makes it easy for you to build a life changing meditation practice with mindfulness that works for you on your schedule anytime, anywhere. So our listeners deserve to feel happier and Headspace is meditation made simple, simple, go to headspace.com/overtired.
[00:27:28] That’s headspace.com/overtired for a free one month trial with access to headspaces full library of meditations for every situation. This is the best deal that’s out there right now. So head to headspace.com/overtired today.
[00:27:45] Christina: [00:27:45] Thank you Headspace.
[00:27:46] Brett: [00:27:46] Thanks Headspace. Um, I’m a fan, I’m a fan. So I added a bunch of like news articles that were there’s a lot of privacy stuff going on right now.
[00:27:57] Christina: [00:27:57] Yeah, no, I saw that. Um, before we [00:28:00] get into that, let’s go back to fish shell. Before we talk about that. Yeah. Let’s let’s go back to fish. Saul.
[00:28:04] Brett: [00:28:04] now. I feel comfortable with this now. Um, so I was just evangelizing for fish in, uh, in, uh, um, uh, Slack that I got invited into this Slack team that, uh, like I thought it was going to be a bunch of, uh, well, I, I, I don’t know what I thought it was gonna be, but I get in there and.
[00:28:29] All the greats are in there. We’ve got rich Teagle Daniel gel cut Florian Albrecht, like, uh, it’s a who’s who of independent developers.
[00:28:41] Christina: [00:28:41] Hell. Yeah.
[00:28:42] Brett: [00:28:42] and you can ask a question. You can ask a stupid question to which they will reply. Obviously there are no stupid questions and you will get help. It’s amazing. I shouldn’t, I shouldn’t talk about this.
[00:28:53] Like everyone’s invited, I don’t, I don’t know what the, uh, I don’t know how open it is, but I got in and [00:29:00] I’m super it’s amazing. But anyway, I, I was, uh, I was asking questions about this, uh, in S task controller I’m working on and we got into a discussion of shells and I found myself evangelists for fish.
[00:29:13] I know it has, it has its quirks. It’s a little bit slow. But the, uh, the, the completion and the type of head stuff, and it remembers, uh, command history per directory. So it will remember what the last command you ran in this directory was, and I love it. I couldn’t be happier. I’ve used it for a year now. I, I, I opened up basher Z shell and it feels old and boring, and I love fish.
[00:29:46] Christina: [00:29:46] Yeah. I like it. My only issue with it is that the thing about Zetia, especially if you use like or something, is that you can, you either, you can’t get everything that you can get with fish, but you can get some stuff that’s, that’s closer. Although to your point, it will make [00:30:00] things slower. Right. Because you can have this like massive, like, um, you know, um, um, um, XOs like profile, like that’s just massive.
[00:30:08] Uh, but. My only thing with fish. Cause I like fish and it makes sense. And like it’s a good shell. And like, it, it, I think that it was former Apple people who created it. If I recall correctly, I’m I could be wrong. I could be wrong on that. Uh, that feels right. But there’s some sort of Apple connection, but I’m not sure, but the only thing is is that.
[00:30:27] The nice thing about shell is that it is backwards compatible with bash. And there are certain times where I will not either remember like a command in visual need to look it up or more to the point, like you need to run something. And if it hasn’t been explicitly like said that it’s like bash, you know, then if you’re running it in, in, in fish, like it’s going to give you issues.
[00:30:49] That’s that’s, that’s my only thing.
[00:30:51] Brett: [00:30:51] So all of my, all of my favorite bash scripts and I was at bash stalwart for a decade, um, I have a very, uh, a [00:31:00] very customized, very powerful bash setup and all of my bash scripts. Uh, you just put a bash hash bang in them
[00:31:08] Christina: [00:31:08] Right. No, I understand. No, I understand that. My point is that there are some times you’ll run across things like, especially I’m thinking, like, if you’re doing things from like remote machines or whatever, Where, um, you know, you, you have a script that you’ve, you’ve downloaded from someplace that like you’ll have to go back and edit and add that, or you’ll have to switch your shell environment.
[00:31:28] Brett: [00:31:28] Yeah, I do find myself running bash L for like a log-in shell pretty often, but, um, mostly because I need to figure out why something used to work for me and no, it does,
[00:31:41] Christina: [00:31:41] Right,
[00:31:41] Brett: [00:31:41] yeah, there are like, the scripting is like a very different syntax. It takes a lot of getting used to even just the idea of like exporting, uh, an environment.
[00:31:52] Variable is different in fish. It takes some work.
[00:31:55] Christina: [00:31:55] No totally. I mean, and then the thing for me, I think the reason why I haven’t ever committed to it, although I [00:32:00] really like it is because a lot of the stuff that I do is on virtual machines and is on like, you know, uh, or, or in containers or in other platforms like the cloud where I’m not necessarily going to install fish to get up and running.
[00:32:14] So if I’m like doing something remote, then I have the environment that I have. Right. Like I probably have bash, like I might have Zetia shell, but I probably have bash. And so. I, it, it, I haven’t been able to kind of work it into my like personal kind of muscle memory of, of stuff.
[00:32:31] Brett: [00:32:31] can be like, if you, if you’re a daily user of basher Z shell, you’ve got a pile of aliases and scripts and, uh, modules, especially with Z shell that you’re just used to having and, and assets aging into anyone else’s environment. Even if it’s the same shell can still feel,
[00:32:52] Christina: [00:32:52] No, of course, except I have like my dot files and like get hub repo. And like, there are ways [00:33:00] with certain environment things where I can like set it to use my dot Biles, like, so. That that’s my point. Like you’re not wrong. You’re completely correct. That it still is one of those things. But I guess the difference is that I found workarounds for that.
[00:33:11] Whereas I haven’t for fish, which is why I personally haven’t been able to get with it, although I’ve tried. Cause I it’s, it’s kind of like, I think of it like divorce tech. It’s one of those things where it makes sense, like this is what everybody should be using, but I’m just like, I’m going to be using query because that’s what everyone uses, even though it was not the best
[00:33:32] Brett: [00:33:32] that is an app comparison. Like I know in my heart. That there are better, uh, better keyboard layouts than Cordy. And, uh, I’m just, I’m used to what I’m used to and learning something that will only work on my machine and not anywhere else. I go. It’s a good comparison. Nicely done.
[00:33:52] Christina: [00:33:52] Thank you. Thank you. Yeah, that just came to me. I was like, what’s, what’s the analogy. I was like, Oh yeah, this is the divorce book of, of shells.
[00:33:57] Brett: [00:33:57] Fucking brilliant. [00:34:00] All right. Did we talk enough about fish? I got, so it has this, uh, coloring when, when the, when you type a command that exists and is a valid command. It turns green, uh, uh, arguments. Get one color redirections, get a color quoted strings, get another, uh, con substituted commands. Get a different color.
[00:34:21] So as you type your string is colored also, it’s giving you type ahead completion and it can automatically, there’s a module for Zetia that can do this too, but it can automatically parse, um, all the command line flags and options and with things like brew and get it purses, all the sub commands. So it gives you full.
[00:34:44] Uh, full command completion for just about every command on your system. It knows every flag in every option for every command.
[00:34:53] Christina: [00:34:53] Yeah, no, I really like that. And like, yeah, like you said, you can get extensions for seashell to do that. The problem with both of them, uh, is, [00:35:00] does slow things down initially, but it’s so useful like that. I think that for a lot of people it’s worth it, but it can definitely slow things down because I’ve made that mistake actually.
[00:35:10] Both with fish and it was the shell, uh, because I’ve like gone too far into configuring them and then like had this insane profile. I’m like, Oh, okay. Yeah, no, my terminal is very slow now. And this is a very fast machine, so I need to par this down. Right? Like that’s, that’s always, um, actually I should do a video about that.
[00:35:30] I should do a video for people to like tame their, their shell environment because. I have a feeling. There are a lot of people who, you know, they build up. Yeah. They’re like, God, this is so useful. And they’re like, Oh, why is this taking so long? I’m actually, it’s fun up while we’re talking. Speaking of ADHD, I’ve been going through that.
[00:35:46] I’ve been like going through my, my, um, Zetia, like profile, trying to kind of call stuff. Um, because what, what I’ll wind up doing and, and you maybe you’re wrong. Maybe you’re different than this, but like I’ll wind [00:36:00] up even sometimes like having like different. I profiles that I use with different apps. So I have like a different, you know, one that I’m using with, um, with I term two versus, you know, terminal or whatever, because one will get, yeah, I, I’ve only done that a couple of times as I’ve been trying to like play around, usually I try to keep it consistent, but the reason I did that one time was I was like, I really needed like a burgeoning system with like my profile to kind of go through stuff and I, I didn’t have time and it was so slow.
[00:36:28] It was like, okay, I just need to kind of start over. And I, I, I just like, you know, made a new, a new profile for, um, for item two, because it was like, that was easier than, um, blowing everything away, uh, for the time constraints that I had.
[00:36:43] Brett: [00:36:43] when I see D into a directory, there is always a pause because I run a bunch of, in addition to like regular, like fish has a bit of a lag there anyway. Um, I don’t know what it’s parsing when you see the [00:37:00] end of a directory, but I also run directory hooks. Like, I don’t know if you’ve ever seen my Anais project, but I keep a task paper file.
[00:37:09] And just about every code repository that I have. And it it’s where I put ideas and bugs and to dues and N a. Is a command line tool. I wrote, it’s actually a bash script that when I CD into a folder, it checks the task paper file and pops up like what the next actions and highest priority items are before it displays the directory, the prompt.
[00:37:36] And like I’m willing to wait for that because I have found it extremely useful. And like RVM, like I have different Ruby versions that run depending on which folder I’m in, I’m in. So that, like, that takes time. I’ve just become very patient. I guess. It’s weird when I use like a RA like Z shell command line and things just happen like instantly.
[00:37:59] Christina: [00:37:59] No. I know I’m the [00:38:00] same way. Like when I, like, when I get a new machine, like, you know, I set up a new environment, like that’s always like the best slash the worst part because it’s so fast. And then I’m like, Oh, I don’t have any of my aliases. I don’t have any of my, you know, like none of my stuff is working the way that I wanted to work.
[00:38:13] So the first thing I have to do is, you know, clone my dot file.
[00:38:17] Brett: [00:38:17] you know, what is working for me?
[00:38:19] Christina: [00:38:19] What’s that?
[00:38:20] Brett: [00:38:20] My shower.
[00:38:22] Christina: [00:38:22] Yeah, mine too. Actually. That’s a great segue. So.
[00:38:26] Brett: [00:38:26] It was horrible segue.
[00:38:28] Christina: [00:38:28] okay. It was horrible, but it also is app. So it’s fine. So, uh, our, um, uh, this episode is brought to you by a Nebia, and we’re super excited to tell you about one of our favorite sponsors, who is Nebia, and they are the creators of the Nebia by Mowen spa shower.
[00:38:45] And it’s backed by some of the biggest companies in Silicon Valley, or, uh, sorry, let me start this roll. Read over again. No, I it’s. Okay. So it’s a bad segue, but I mean, we’ll, we’ll make it work. It’s, [00:39:00] it’s kind of perfect in the same way. And this episode is brought to you by Nebia and, uh, we’re excited because Nebia is one of our favorite sponsors and they are the creators of the Nebia by Mohen spa shower. And it’s backed by some of the.
[00:39:12] Biggest names in Silicon Valley, including Tim cook. And it’s designed by former Tesla and NASA and Apple engineers who spent years researching and developing a superior shower experience that saves water and is anything but ordinary. And so the Nebia by Moe and spa shower is Nebby is most advanced shower yet.
[00:39:33] And it has twice the coverage and half the water usage of a standard shower head. Um, and so. The cool thing here is that despite using 45% less water, it spray is 81% more powerful than the competition. And it’s atomized droplets, rinse, shampoo, and conditioner out of even the thickest of hair. I don’t have super thick hair, but I have a ton of hair and my hair is incredibly long right now.
[00:39:58] Like it needs to be cut really [00:40:00] badly. And I can attest to the fact that, uh, you know, even though it’s using less water, it, the. Water pressure is great. And it definitely rinses everything out the way that you would want with easy self installation, Nebia by Mowen can be installed in 15 minutes or less without the need for contractors or plumbers or broken tile.
[00:40:19] So like, if you can change a light bulb, you can install Nebia by Mowen. And I can attest to that because I am somebody who can change the light bulb, but would not be able to, you know, like change a tire. And so this. Worked out great for me. Um, it was very, very good installation experience.
[00:40:38] Brett: [00:40:38] I got to say, I never used to be a long, hot shower person.
[00:40:42] Christina: [00:40:42] Now you are.
[00:40:42] Brett: [00:40:42] now, now I find myself either thinking like, I, I get good ideas when I stay in the shower long enough, it takes a while. Uh, and using half the water helps, you know, like I’m less worried about ecology or [00:41:00] money, but yeah. Now I either I’m thinking, or I’m just reveling in those atomized droplets.
[00:41:05] I am really liking the Nebia by Mowen.
[00:41:08] Christina: [00:41:08] Yeah, no, I I’m somebody who I’ve always liked showers, but I really love the experience and it’s great. And the Novi by Mowen squash hour starts at just $199. And for overtired listeners. We have a great deal for you. The first 100 people to use the code overtired@nebia.com. We’ll get 15% off all Nebia products.
[00:41:31] So it’s rare that Nebia offers deals like this. And so don’t wait to go to nebia.com/overtired that’s N E B I a.com/. Overtired to check out what they have to offer. And again, the first a hundred people who use the code over tired when checking out we’ll save 15% on all Nebia products. So again, that’s nebia.com/overtired and use that code overtired to save 15%.
[00:41:59] Brett: [00:41:59] Great job, [00:42:00] Christina. That was a, that was a, that was a hell of a read.
[00:42:04] Christina: [00:42:04] Thank you. Thank you.
[00:42:06] Brett: [00:42:06] So I w we could talk about how brave bought a search engine, we could talk about color. He yanked tablets. What do you feel like.
[00:42:17] Christina: [00:42:17] Let’s talk about brave a little bit. I will talk, we’ll talk more about the eating tablets next week. Um, because, um, I have like more thoughts on that, but be brave. Find a search engine. This is weird to me.
[00:42:27] Brett: [00:42:27] Ah, well, I mean, it
[00:42:30] Christina: [00:42:30] mean, it’s not weird. It makes sense, but yeah.
[00:42:32] Brett: [00:42:32] fits, uh, the idea of like their, their kind of mission statement and creating like a search engine, that’s more crowdsourced and works with micro payments. Uh, like it makes sense. I am a little concerned, like, I, I need to know more about you. You don’t at all.
[00:42:54] Christina: [00:42:54] Not at all. Not even remotely.
[00:42:55] Brett: [00:42:55] I need to know more about, they have this thing called goggles, which [00:43:00] basically lets anybody create filters.
[00:43:03] So like you could have, we talk about filter bubbles and these are basically their filters that you opt into. Like the thing about. Filter bubbles that upsets people is they don’t even know they’re in a bubble. They don’t know that Google is giving them different results than it’s giving other people and braid search engine.
[00:43:24] They’re talking about, uh, basically being able to opt into different filters. Like you want nothing, but like creationists anti-vaxxer results, you can turn that filter on which, you know, that’s like the scary thing to me. I. Also there’s so much shit out on the internet that you kind of have to choose your filters.
[00:43:45] I guess
[00:43:46] Christina: [00:43:46] Yeah. I mean, at a certain point it’s like, I don’t well, because the problem is, is that with, with, with SEO, which. For better or worse is, is how things work. Like people will optimize [00:44:00] stuff, you know, to, it’s not as if like organic ranking only means so much, right? Like the beauty of, of the original kind of.
[00:44:09] Google page rank was, yeah. SEO is part of it, but it was also kind of like a built-in kind of thing where they could kind of assess where they would try to assess, like how useful was this result, right. Like how often would you like stay on that page or when you click back to another result or like how, how useful was it?
[00:44:23] Right. Um, how much did it actually answer your question versus how much do they just stop the keywords? So it showed up at the top and that’s, they’ve gotten a little bit away from that. Right. But it’s like to your point, We all have, like these filter bubbles will take over. If you don’t have anything, like if it’s just kind of a free for all.
[00:44:40] Then I fear that the people who are going to capitalize on it the most, it’s not like the internet is a meritocracy or anything, not the meritocracies even exist, but the internet certainly is not Ameritocracy. And it’s like, it’s going to be the shit that you see, that’s going to rise up and it’s going to take over, you know what I mean?
[00:44:58] Like if you don’t have some sort of. [00:45:00] Um, filtering or, or grounders in place, like in a perfect ideal world. Of course it would be everyone on its merits, but that’s not the world we live in or that we’ve ever lived in. And the internet is no exception. So.
[00:45:11] Brett: [00:45:11] part of braids plan though is, uh, to anonymously track, which. Uh, which links which get clicked and which ones seem to be the right result. And they have some plans for like spacing out the tracking from the actual clicks. So you can’t tell which user clicked what, but still be able to collect the information about which, uh, which result ended up being the right one and kind of building their index based on that.
[00:45:44] Christina: [00:45:44] Right. You know, I mean, it could work. I mean, like Apple is trying to do something similar with differential, privacy and Google there, you know what we talked about a little bit last week and that you have more links on this. Cause it was, you know, uh effs um, article about their, um, uh, you know, [00:46:00] federated learning of cohort cohorts thing, which was pretty critical of it.
[00:46:04] Um, like it’s, um, It’s an, it’s not a bad idea, right? It’s one of those things where I think it could make sense. I think my genuine question is always, it’s not that it’s not technically possible to truly anonymize this stuff. It’s is it likely because we’ve seen with a lot of these, you know, um, so-called anonymized kind of services and whatnot.
[00:46:26] That really, you can still very much identify who individuals are. Like the New York times had a thing. I think it was last year where they were able to kind of gather a bunch of cell phone data and they were able to basically track down and, and identify like individuals and individual movements throughout DC based on their cell phone patterns.
[00:46:45] And this was supposed to be information that was anonymized, but it could still be very much individualized. And I’ll be honest and say, I care less about things like. My search history. Not that I [00:47:00] don’t care about it, but I care less about having a profile for that exist for advertising companies or for whoever.
[00:47:05] Then I do about like my location being tracked. Um, I, you know, feel like that is, is far more insidious and has far more repercussions, but I do always look at any claim from any company who’s like, yeah, we can de-anonymize uh, or not, not de-anonymize we can anonymize. Um, you know, this, this information and aggregate while still offering the features that we get from, you know, um, tracking things and tailoring things.
[00:47:34] I just look at that with a side eye. I know it’s possible. I just, I just don’t know how likely it is, but I don’t know.
[00:47:43] Brett: [00:47:43] mean, so to the Google point there, their flock idea is basically instead of tracking individuals, we’re going to assign individuals to groups and your browser will do the tracking instead of cookies. And. [00:48:00] Ultimately, it’s still targeted advertising and it still comes with all the potential for the discrimination and privacy invasion.
[00:48:08] And there, there are a lot of like, it’s all like white paper at this point. There’s no, there’s no actual plan. The browser, the first, uh, kind of incarnations of it were supposed to come out. Maybe April. Uh, but there’s like, there are so many unanswered question about like how they’re actually going to do this.
[00:48:27] And the more I read, um, like starting with eff statement on it, like, it it’s very questionable. Like why would you Google gave up targeted advertising? Like you got to question
[00:48:41] Christina: [00:48:41] No, they’re not. I mean, well, of course it’s like the whole reason is because it’s no longer, um, either, uh, viable from like, you know, you see Mozilla, but, but really the big thing is Safari and you see other people like blocking. Certain types of targeting. And so it makes it harder for them to do their job.
[00:48:58] And then you maybe have some of [00:49:00] the antitrust or other kind of government kind of interference with that stuff. Right? Like that’s, that’s the, the city that can meet who looks at that. I’m like, okay, those are your reasons. Like, that’s why you would do this because you wouldn’t get rid of it for just any reason because you don’t, you don’t care.
[00:49:13] Right? Like it’s one of those things. You’re like, no, like, I, I, um, This, this is a big part of their business. I mean, this whole thing with DoubleClick, which is why I think DoubleClick was such a important, like innovation for them. Uh, like we’re not innovation, but such an important like acquisition for them.
[00:49:27] Um, and it does seem like they’re just kind of shifting the narrative a little bit, but it’s, um, I don’t know, like I’m, I’m absolutely. So, so, um, I question like how some of that stuff works, but it’s also one of those things where I think with brave, my issue is, and they, they bought what they bought as they bought clicks, where they bought like the people behind clicks, which was like a privacy focused.
[00:49:56] Search engine. And so it has some basis, you know, when in prior stuff. [00:50:00] And it’s not that I have any doubt in the technical acumen of the people behind brave. I think they’re actually smart. And I think there are a lot of good ideas in the browser. What I can’t get over with brave as much as they’ve tried to spend things I’m like still mad at them about this.
[00:50:12] Cause I just find it so disingenuous and it makes me hard to trust. Anything they say is like, I’m very bothered by the fact that like they take out advertisements on other people’s content and replace it with their own advertisements. And then the only way that the people whose advertisements they’ve taken over, which I have a problem with, if you’re going to replace it with your own.
[00:50:32] Um, and, and to be honest, I kind of don’t love like, as like a for-profit entity taking out advertisements by default at all. Like if I’m being totally honest. Um, but, but particularly if they’re, you know, adding their own on top of it, the only way that the people who. Can, you know, who are the creators of that stuff can, can get paid, is that they opt in to Braves program.
[00:50:57] Like it just, I’m still really bothered [00:51:00] by that. And I still find that to be such a disingenuous thing to be like, Oh, we hate advertisements except the ones that we’re going to replace your ads. But like, I just feel like.
[00:51:10] Brett: [00:51:10] but, but, but like the whole idea is like, basically they don’t, it’s not that they hate advertisements. They hate the way advertising
[00:51:18] Christina: [00:51:18] I, yeah, I get that, but I still feel like it’s not their place. And I still feel like it’s pretty fucked up too, for them to take like the, the role of saying we want our company to make money and we’re fine with the ads that we sell. And so we will proactively take them off of your stuff.
[00:51:35] Brett: [00:51:35] aren’t targeted
[00:51:36] Christina: [00:51:36] I understand that, but that, but, but, but, but that doesn’t give them the right on my website for them to replace how my website is, is displayed to people who visit my website like that.
[00:51:45] To me, I’m sorry. I think that’s fucked up. Like, I, I’m not okay with that. Like, I’m fine with ad blockers in general. I’m not really down with like the ad blockers that are owned by ad companies, you know, like ad block pluses, like you block origin, I’m all about regular you block is a whole other thing. [00:52:00] Um, and.
[00:52:01] And I, I, you know, people do what you want, but like, as somebody who used to work in an advertiser, you know, kind of, you know, sponsored kind of world, but even beyond that, and just frankly, from like an autonomy standpoint, like who the fuck is brave to decide what ads I can or can’t display on my website.
[00:52:17] Like if an individual user wants to install a plugin, that’s fine, but who the hell is this browser company? It’s not only get rid of them, but replace them with ones they’ve deemed. Correct. Like who the fuck gives them that authority and then who the hell it lets them say, Oh, and we’ll, we’ll pay you, but you have to opt into our bullshit bat token system.
[00:52:36] You have to like, give us your information so we can pay you for stuff that we are like, we’re taking your ads and replacing ours. So we’re like, I just think it’s fucked up. And I think it’s a really disingenuous way of them saying, Oh, we care about. Like they don’t give a shit about creators. They don’t, and that’s fine, but don’t pretend like you do.
[00:52:54] I just find it really disingenuous to be like, Oh, ads are bad, except for ours.
[00:53:00] [00:53:00] Brett: [00:53:00] fair enough. You, you, you feel very passionate about this.
[00:53:04] Christina: [00:53:04] Well, I don’t know. I mean, I don’t, I don’t know when, like I use brave from time to time. I don’t use it on the desktop. I use it on mobile sometimes and I’m like, I, again, like, I feel like they have good ideas. I just, I find that whole thing really disingenuous. I also find the cult around brand. Brendan Eich completely.
[00:53:21] Stupid because the reason the cult exists is because he was briefly Mozilla CEO and then was fired, I think, rightly so. He never should have been elevated to that position without them doing like a deep dive into stuff. Um, and, and people are still mad about that and they’re like, Oh, well, Mozilla would be different Firefox.
[00:53:38] Wouldn’t be so fucked if Hubert and charge. No, it would still be pretty fucked. It would still be completely reliant on Google. Like he, him being the leader wouldn’t have changed anything. I don’t think, but. Like I respect his technical stuff, technical ability. I just don’t quite understand the cult of people who are like obsessed with him because of some vendetta that they’re mad that he got, you [00:54:00] know, fired for. Like, I don’t, he couldn’t lead that organization. People didn’t feel comfortable with someone like that as their leader
[00:54:12] Brett: [00:54:12] you know what browser is probably the safest. And probably the most pure links.
[00:54:20] Christina: [00:54:20] Oh, yeah. Okay. Fair enough. But like that’s yeah. I mean, I guess that’s the one good one. Yeah.
[00:54:26] Brett: [00:54:26] I just, I just checked my command line to see if Lynx is still like, installed on my machine and it totally is. Um, I don’t remember how to use it. Yeah.
[00:54:38] Christina: [00:54:38] Yeah, I was going to say, hasn’t it been replaced with something like isn’t there like another, like, I think obviously it’s still a thing, but, um, I think that there’s like another text base. Um, what browser.
[00:54:49] Brett: [00:54:49] there, I bet there is, but yeah, I’m reading my blog right now with links and no ads, no cookies. And I mean, I try to have a [00:55:00] blog that works without JavaScript anyway,
[00:55:02] Christina: [00:55:02] I was going to say you care about accessibility. I mean, that’s actually the, I think probably one of the best things about like going like JavaScript free, um, is accessible, although I’m not opposed to JavaScript or whatever, but yeah.
[00:55:15] Brett: [00:55:15] Yeah, well, I use JavaScript to add functionality, but not replaced functionality.
[00:55:20] Christina: [00:55:20] right. Progressive
[00:55:21] Brett: [00:55:21] yeah. My site works in links that should be, uh, works best in links. You remember those works best in internet Explorer and Netscape icons.
[00:55:30] Christina: [00:55:30] I showed you I’ve I’ve um, I’ve actually kind of been wanting to like make a t-shirt or something that has like, you know, works best Netscape navigator, 4.0 or something
[00:55:39] Brett: [00:55:39] Um, I’m Googling works best in links right now because I’m really curious if this already exists. It doesn’t, I’m going to make, well, I shouldn’t say it. Doesn’t duck, duck go. Didn’t offer an immediate, uh, uh, immediate link. I, I think, uh, I’m think I’m going to put a sticker on my blog. Oh, uh, works best, best [00:56:00] viewed in links.
[00:56:01] How did what’s that phrase before best viewed in? Yeah, it was best viewed. I love these live Google searches
[00:56:10] Christina: [00:56:10] I was going to say best feed and internet explore button. Um, uh, I’m looking like for the images. Yeah. Best viewed with Microsoft internet Explorer was, um, was usually how it worked or best viewed with the Netscape navigator.
[00:56:23] Brett: [00:56:23] cause you had to make a decision. At some point you
[00:56:25] Christina: [00:56:25] You did.
[00:56:26] Brett: [00:56:26] you could choose Netscape or you could choose internet Explorer and you could like, they, they were so divergent at that point. And now it’s, you know, it’s chromium and WebKit and like what’s the other one? What’s Oh, and Mozilla. Gecko.
[00:56:43] Yeah. Um, like they’re still like, yeah, they move, they accept different parts of the spec at different rates, but it’s nothing like it was back then. Like the HTML was different for the
[00:56:56] Christina: [00:56:56] Right. Well, right. Well like, like internet Explorer, like in like [00:57:00] adopted CSS first. Right. And then there was like the whole act of X thing. Yeah, no, they were different. Like, if you just did H developi 3m, but even there was a time when like tables would be different. And yet I remember that being in middle school and like having to figure out how to get my layout, to look as accurate as possible in both browsers,
[00:57:16] Brett: [00:57:16] because tables were how we did layout back then.
[00:57:19] Christina: [00:57:19] completely complete tables and frames.
[00:57:22] Brett: [00:57:22] Oh, frames.
[00:57:23] Christina: [00:57:23] Frames. Yep.
[00:57:25] Brett: [00:57:25] Yup. And server side includes
[00:57:28] Christina: [00:57:28] Which are coming back now.
[00:57:29] Brett: [00:57:29] really why?
[00:57:32] Christina: [00:57:32] I don’t know.
[00:57:33] Brett: [00:57:33] Huh? Yeah. Okay. Um, well, it should be another segment of our show. Uh, reminiscing about old technology.
[00:57:43] Christina: [00:57:43] I know. And everything old is new. Again, it’s one of those weird things where like, Yeah. Uh, because there’s the, there’s this certain like push to, you know, everything like yeah. Everything like went like from anyway. Yeah. There’s this, everything old is new. Again, everything being slightly [00:58:00] reinvented differently.
[00:58:01] Um, uh, okay. We’ve got, do we have one more sponsor? We need to talk to,
[00:58:06] Brett: [00:58:06] do. We do. And it’s, I saved my, my favorite for last. And hopefully everyone is still listening because I got to tell you about text expander,
[00:58:14] Christina: [00:58:14] well, text expander.
[00:58:16] Brett: [00:58:16] love, text expander. We could talk about this every week for free, but we’re, we’re getting paid. So, so, um, I’m gonna, I’m gonna read most of this, but I’m going to have a lot of stuff I have to say.
[00:58:27] Um, so work harder. No work smarter, not harder with
[00:58:34] Christina: [00:58:34] There you go. There you go. Nailed it.
[00:58:38] Brett: [00:58:38] text expander helps you work faster and smarter so you can focus your time on your most important work, who just a few keystrokes text expander keeps you consistent, accurate, and working efficiently speed through emails with snippets containing fill in fields that you can trigger with a couple of keystrokes, fill in fields, make it possible.
[00:58:57] Customize a snippet. Every time you use it, [00:59:00] only changing the parts that need to using text expanders, powerful shortcuts and abbreviations can streamline and speed up everything you type. And it helps you get your message, right? Every time you can expand content that correct your spelling keeps your language consistent with just a few keystrokes.
[00:59:17] And if you’re working in like a team environment, you can have, uh, texts. TextExpander for teams, which can let you define kind of like, this is how we address, uh, customers. This is how we reply to this kind of request. This is how we, uh, state our mission. Like you can have consistent language for everyone in the company and it’s super easy.
[00:59:39] Um, and people don’t have to go check a style guide every time. But anyway, Overtired listeners get 20% off their first year and you can go to text expander.com/podcast to get your discount and learn more about text expanders. So I, I, yes, I just published, uh, [01:00:00] I have this old system called Tex expenders snippet T snippets, and I built it so that I could share my snippet groups publicly.
[01:00:09] This is before they had
[01:00:11] Christina: [01:00:11] This is before they, they, I was going to say before they let you publicly do it. Yeah. I used to do something similar.
[01:00:16] Brett: [01:00:16] So, and then I, I, I built it. So like basically I was editing Pilates files. It was automated, but I would convert my P list into something that could be templated and people could punch in their own favorite prefix and it would give them a custom URL. And, uh, since building that text, expander has created a kind of a public.
[01:00:36] Sharing a snippet sharing a part of their website and you can go and view all these public snippets. So I have started converting my snippet groups into these public groups and I put my first one up. I’ll link it in the, uh, in the show notes, but it’s, uh, it’s kind of the core Bret Turkstra tools that I use with text expander.
[01:00:59] Um, [01:01:00] like the ones that are, you know, fit for public consumption anyway.
[01:01:03] Christina: [01:01:03] No exactly. No. Yeah, totally. I know what you mean. I had one that I think somebody else, uh, basically kind of took and did something similar with, but I had like the various, um, like, uh, emoticons, um, which I think is now like an official one. Like people can like download or whatever, but like I’d created, this was years ago.
[01:01:22] Like a thing, you know of
[01:01:23] Brett: [01:01:23] the shrug and the table flip. Those are, yeah. You copy paste those every
[01:01:27] Christina: [01:01:27] yeah, so yeah, so I, so I have like a text expanders thing, which is, um, just some Astros Astros shrug, and it’ll automatically insert. And then I have other things too. Yeah. Um,
[01:01:38] Brett: [01:01:38] I have one that’s comma, comma, F U U. it, it, it puts like an image that just says, fuck, uh,
[01:01:47] Christina: [01:01:47] That’s nice. Yeah. I used to have a thing. Um, I need to go back and like do it, but I, yeah, I used to have a whole thing with text expander, with my, like a Jif reaction. My reaction shift library.
[01:02:00] [01:02:00] Brett: [01:02:00] I also created one for cussing. Um, if you, I think it’s either cursor, cus I can’t remember. I don’t use it often because I tend to just swear, but w when you trigger it, it gives you a fill in and you type in the swear word you want to say. And it turns it into like cartoon with all the punctuation just keeps the first letter.
[01:02:21] And if it ends in Ang, it leaves the NGS. So you get like F exclamation point pound sign at symbol in. And, uh, it’s, it’s very handy for, uh, like Facebook where, you know, my mom reads my stuff, so I, I can, I can, I can cuss, but do it in a. Um, more acceptable way for my mother. I mean, she still like to her, like, I mean to her, like crap and, and, uh, cheese and rice is just as bad as saying Jesus Christ.
[01:02:51] Cause it’s all, you know, I know what you meant.
[01:02:55] Christina: [01:02:55] I mean she’s not wrong, which, which my argument is like, okay, if you know what I meant, then I should just say the [01:03:00] actual term. But, um, yeah, I, uh, I just looked at my text expander, like the ASCII mode of content. Cause they have one that you can subscribe to or whatever that you can do, which was, I think largely taken from my original one at some point, because I had one that was FEI, but the actual term, and that is, that is hell yeah.
[01:03:19] And um, and the one that is, I guess, fit for public consumption.
[01:03:24] Brett: [01:03:24] yeah, no attribution. I assume that stuff gets lost.
[01:03:29] Christina: [01:03:29] Which is fine, which is completely okay. Like I’m just happy people are able to use it. Uh, but yeah, no attribution, but, um, I’m actually, I think that was why I knew that it was mine was because like, that thing was changed, but some of the other things were the same. And I was like, Oh yeah. Okay. Cause I remembered when I created those things and I was like, you know, naming them.
[01:03:48] And that was certainly like a choice that is very unbrand for me. So.
[01:03:54] Brett: [01:03:54] all right. Well, we should wrap up so I can edit this and still get it out today.
[01:03:58] Christina: [01:03:58] Totally [01:04:00] totally. Um,
[01:04:01] Brett: [01:04:01] this and it’s still Wednesday, it means I won the battle against time and got it
[01:04:07] Christina: [01:04:07] it means bright won the battle against time.
[01:04:08] Brett: [01:04:08] it’s Thursday or Friday, it means that maybe, maybe Brett’s mental health became more important than, uh, than editing this goddamn podcast for you.
[01:04:18] Ungrateful sons of bitches.
[01:04:20] Christina: [01:04:20] Basically also I realized I was way angrier in the brave segment that I should have been. I actually do feel like I’m just going to go back to this for a
[01:04:29] Brett: [01:04:29] angry. Just passionate.
[01:04:30] Christina: [01:04:30] well, okay. But like, okay. I think that like, what they do with ads is fucked up, but I am happy that someone is at least trying to do something with a, with a, with a search engine.
[01:04:39] Even if I don’t like a lot of the things that they do. I do. I am glad somebody is doing something with a search engine. Like I hope that that will force. Like we need more competition in this space. There was, uh, there was like an article or maybe it was on daring fireball that the group were talked about.
[01:04:54] Like, um, like how Google results are, are worse, you know, than they used to be. [01:05:00] And there were a lot of, they are, and I think there’s been a lot of conversation about why that’s happened. And people up like Lambo, they put the ads and then this and that. No, I’ll tell you what it is is that they have no competition and they haven’t had any competition.
[01:05:12] There’s literally no one who is even like close to making them have to try. So they don’t have to care. And, and it’s like, it’s like, what happens when you’re the best at something for a really long time, you just get lazy. So if for no other reason than forcing, like. Google to step it up and improve. I want things like, um, Braves thing and, and I, and duck, duck go and, and other stuff to have a chance, you know?
[01:05:41] Brett: [01:05:41] Yeah, I was just thinking yesterday about trying to figure out why Google results seem worse than they used to be. Like, I used to build a, take an X code error message punch it. Into Google and figure out what the problem was. Now. I basically just get a bunch of Pastebin and just links to people [01:06:00] having the same problem with absolutely no like conversation or wrestling, or it it’ll send me to the, all these sites that, um, Uh, that mirror stack overflow.
[01:06:12] And I think they, they just scrapes that overflow and then add ads to it. But those results come up before stack overflow
[01:06:22] Christina: [01:06:22] Yes, no. Which
[01:06:23] Brett: [01:06:23] not on duck. Duck go, duck,
[01:06:25] Christina: [01:06:25] I know.
[01:06:26] Brett: [01:06:26] you like instant answers. It’ll even highlight the answered.
[01:06:29] Christina: [01:06:29] Right because Dr. Goh doesn’t have access, I’m guessing to the paid API stuff. Right. Like, you know, they’re also, they’re using being for some other backend stuff, they’re using different things, but like they got, they don’t have the same, um, ways that people can like abuse the Infoblox or, or whatever, the way that, that Google does.
[01:06:51] Brett: [01:06:51] Yeah. I still love duck duck.
[01:06:54] Christina: [01:06:54] I do too. I do too. I
[01:06:55] Brett: [01:06:55] know there’s a bang Terp stra search. [01:07:00] There’s an official, I can’t remember if it’s Terp. I think it’s bang Terp. Like for anyone who doesn’t know a duck, duck go has these, uh, you put an exclamation point and then a word and it’ll do a special search based on the bank search.
[01:07:15] Uh, and there’s one that searches my blog with like bang, Terp. That’s awesome. I’m honored. Um, I’m blown away by that. That’s good. Yeah. Anyway, anyway. Okay. Well, yeah. Get some sleep, Christina.
[01:07:30] Christina: [01:07:30] Get some sleep bread and yeah, it is, it is bang, Terp. That’s awesome.
[01:07:35] Brett: [01:07:35] I’ll link a link, a random search in the show notes.
[01:07:38] Christina: [01:07:38] Yeah. I, I just, I just, I just typed in a bang Terp and then keyboards and it immediately came up with
[01:07:44] Brett: [01:07:44] Yeah. All right. Well, and everyone check out the discord to, uh, keep the conversations going. W we
[01:07:51] Christina: [01:07:51] definitely. Yeah. Um, and, uh, Taylor Swift is up for six Grammys on Sunday. So, you know, we definitely have suffered, gonna [01:08:00] have to be talking about with her for next
[01:08:01] Brett: [01:08:01] over tired fodder for the future. All right. Oh, and we should watch, we should watch the, uh, the, the, the, the, uh, Billie Eilish. And we can
[01:08:10] Christina: [01:08:10] Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Let’s watch the Billie Eilish documentary so we can talk about that. That sounds good.
[01:08:14] Brett: [01:08:14] All right. Rock on. Get some sleep.
[01:08:16] Christina: [01:08:16] Get some sleep.

Mar 5, 2021 • 51min
229: The One Where They Slept In The Middle
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Transcript
20210303 0933 Guest
[00:00:00] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:00:00] So w you’re you’re now listening to what is going to be weird episode of over tired, uh, w w this is Brett and Christina from the future saying, saying when we started this. Uh, you’ll see, things were, things were different than they are now.
[00:00:18] So bear with us, get through the first half and we promise it gets better.
[00:00:24] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:00:24] It totally gets better also like. Let us know in the discord or on Twitter or wherever, like how much, uh, of, uh, how, how angry did I sound in the first part? Cause I don’t know, but I have a feeling that I was, I was pretty cranky.
[00:00:40]Intro
[00:00:44] Hi, I’m Brett Terpstra. You’re listening to overtired. I’m here with Christina Warren who is extremely tired. How are you Christina?
[00:00:52]20210303 0933 Guest : [00:00:52] I’m so tired.
[00:00:55] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:00:55] Like, like, did you sleep at all?
[00:00:57] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:00:57] I mean, I got like, uh, like three [00:01:00] hours of sleep maybe. Um, And then after we do this, I will be lucky if I get another three hours of sleep. Um, and then I have to go back in for another six, seven hours, seven hours, another like seven hours of fly posting for Microsoft ignite
[00:01:18] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:01:18] Yeah, that seems unreasonable. Why, why, why, why are you asked to keep this schedule?
[00:01:25] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:01:25] because it’s Microsoft ignite. And I got the, uh, short end of the stick, um, schedule wise, actually like. I think only one team who were paired up probably didn’t get this sort of, uh, kind of bad schedule combo. So the way that it works is that we had like three different groups of, of hosting pairs who are, um, hosting content in like seven hour blocks.
[00:01:52] And, um, But there’s like an overlap period. Uh, when you, you pick up from the other other person and then you have [00:02:00] to get in at a certain time for, for call time for hair and makeup and stuff like that. So, um, there was one group that, you know, I think they had to be in at 6:00 AM and then they went live at eight yesterday and they went from eight until, I guess like, you know, like, uh, one, um, or, or, or two.
[00:02:21] And then the next group went from two until nine, and then we went from nine until three. Um, but the, the group that went from, um, two until nine had to be back in at six and then we had to be back in at, um, my call time. Is it, uh, 1230? Uh, and then, um, the next, um, or one o’clock rather, and then the next group is, um, We’ll be taking over from us at, uh, like 9:00 PM, but we’ll do the switch off at like eight 30.
[00:02:56] So they’re only the people who went, who went [00:03:00] first and are also going last a half, like a long period of time between their ships and, and the rest of us. It’s just, uh, it’s just how it works.
[00:03:10] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:03:10] I, uh, historically, if anyone asked me to do anything close to that kind of schedule, I would, I would either put my foot down or I’d just quit, which is why I don’t have a job anymore.
[00:03:24] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:03:24] Well, and,
[00:03:24] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:03:24] it.
[00:03:25] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:03:25] and in fairness to be totally honest, I mean, this is the thing where I should, we should have recorded this yesterday. I should have found a way to record this yesterday. And that way I would have been able to have an interrupted sleep. The thing that’s going to kill me is the fact that. We, uh, I got like three hours of sleep.
[00:03:41] I had to do the recording or show, which I’m excited to do, but I’m very tired. And then going to try to get another period of, of sleep before I have to wake up again and go in. So
[00:03:53] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:03:53] so there is such a thing as too tired.
[00:03:56]20210303 0933 Guest : [00:03:56] I guess so I guess, so
[00:03:59] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:03:59] lesson.
[00:04:00] [00:03:59] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:03:59] that is, that is today’s lesson. So yeah. And the thing is, is it’s, it’s both tired from like, Lack of sleep, but also exhaustion because I’ve been like, it’s a lot of work. Uh, it, when you, when you, you know, see like hosting stuff, like you think, Oh, it’s not a big deal, you know, just talking to a camera.
[00:04:17] Um, but there’s like energy required to have to keep that up and to have to keep up the momentum and whatnot. And so, yeah, so I’m, uh, I’m dragging ass and for that, I apologize, but the event is great.
[00:04:29] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:04:29] We’re going to be okay, we’re going to, we’re going to make this a, a shorter than usual episode. Uh we’re we’re primarily doing this because we have a couple of fantastic sponsors that have paid us to do this show and, you know, we’re nothing, if not good for our, our, our good to our word. So, uh, do you wanna, do you wanna, uh, do a very tired read about multivitamins?
[00:04:55] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:04:55] Actually, yeah, this, um, this is a very apt ad read [00:05:00] and, uh, to be totally honest, this is one of those, this is like a perfect instructive reason why it’s good to take a multivitamin. I’m not even joking when you, once you, you know, like, Combat both tiredness and sleepiness and exhaustion. There we go, because they’re the sleepiness and exhaustion.
[00:05:21] All right. So this episode is brought to you by ritual and you might be surprised to learn that the typical multivitamins, uh, they can contain sugars and synthetic fibers and artificial colorants. And that’s mentioned all kinds of animal byproducts, like sheep, swollen, gelatin from hubs and hides, which we’re going to, but ritual is not your typical multivitamin, uh, rituals, clean, vegan, friendly formula is made with key nutrients in forms that your body can actually use.
[00:05:52] No shady extras and all of rituals, nutrients come in bioavailable forms so that your body can [00:06:00] actually use them. And it’s also, non-GMO gluten and allergen-free, which is great. I really like ritual and I have to say I probably would be an even worse shape and would probably feel. Even more exhausted if I was not now taking a multivitamin.
[00:06:17] And what I like about Richelle is that my vitamins show up at my doorstep every single month. All I have to do is pop a couple in the morning. And then like I filled that nutrient gap in my diet in God knows, based on what I eat or don’t eat. I have a. Nutrient gap. So it’s super, super convenient. Virtual multivitamins are delivered to your door every single month.
[00:06:41] You get free shipping. Always you can start, you can snooze, or you can cancel your subscription at any time. And if you don’t like a virtual, if you don’t love ritual within your first month, they will even refund your order. So you’re literally are losing nothing. Um, they have all [00:07:00] kinds of different formulas.
[00:07:00] I take the formula. That is focused on women, but you can also, you know, get, um, get one that’s, you know, uh, geared more towards your, your age or gender and you deserve to know what’s in your multivitamin. And that’s why ritual is offering our listeners. And this is great, 10% off during your first three months.
[00:07:20] So visit ritual.com/overtired. Start your ritual today.
[00:07:26] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:07:26] Yay. Vitamins, vitamins and sleep.
[00:07:31] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:07:31] I mean, honestly, uh, I not to reread the ad, but I do feel like I would beat being like, or shape if I were not taking a multivitamin now. So.
[00:07:42] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:07:42] Yeah. Um, so I have been sleeping, but I’m back on that thing where I sleep like. Maybe an hour lesson night than I should. And I don’t feel rested. So it like piles up over time. And like every day I feel a little [00:08:00] bit more tired and it’s not like, like I can function fine, but everything feels a little bit more overwhelming to me. I get more and more like scared to go outside.
[00:08:12] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:08:12] Now, do you have notes? Okay. So like everyday, like you’re getting an hour less sleep than you should, but not an hour, less than the night before, but at the end of the week, Can you just like sleep in all day on like a Saturday or a Sunday or no?
[00:08:27] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:08:27] is I could sleep in every day. Like I, the earliest I actually have to get up is like seven, but I. Typically, I wake up like five, five 30 and that’s. So like last week I was depressed. I was at the end of like a two week long depression. And then right after we recorded, I had like a brief manic episode and it only lasts.
[00:08:54] I only, I only was sleepless entirely sleepless for one night. I got like two hours of sleep. And then the [00:09:00] next day I was in a zombie, but then I just started sleeping again. But that like seven hours a night. So I feel like I’ve never really fully recovered, but I will say I’m in a lot higher energy in better shape than you are right now.
[00:09:14] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:09:14] You are, this is like a we’re in rare form right now. I have to say, we’ve been doing this. I don’t even know how many years at this point,
[00:09:20] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:09:20] Who knows? It’s
[00:09:21] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:09:21] seven years, it is a noble it’s seven years, but, uh, it, you know, we’ve had periods of off times, but I think this is one of the few times that I can recall more. I’ve felt like you have more energy than me.
[00:09:37] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:09:37] Yeah. Uh, um, I got my, I got my U H K V two.
[00:09:44] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:09:44] Ooh, let’s talk about that. Cause we were talking about keyboards last week and how I was going down that rabbit hole and Twitter made it worse. So, uh, and everybody on Twitter now wants me to build and sold her and do my own keyboard, which I, I don’t want to [00:10:00] do. I don’t think, but I don’t know. Um, but I want to hear about the uhk too, because.
[00:10:05] You are the H came in and you’ve been waiting for this. So you, you not only got the keyboard early, but you also got all of the modules that everybody has been waiting for it. Right.
[00:10:16] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:10:16] is correct, but, but the, uh, the keyboards showed up and the thing about the ultimate hacking keyboard is it’s completely customizable everything from like tilt and angle and risk for us to what keys do, what things. And I have a very particular way. I want mine set up. So the first thing I did was load up the, the agent that writes to the firmware and start customizing, but nothing would write to the keyboard.
[00:10:45] And I contacted, uh, the developer and turns out after sending, uh, error, logs and whatnot that they put the wrong bootloader on. And [00:11:00] so the options I have. Are to go out, buy a probe and a soldering kit. And, uh, and by the, the correct, like pin, uh, solder it all back together and then use the probe to flash new.
[00:11:18] I don’t like this is all foreign language to me, but to flash new firmware to it, uh, or a new bootloader or ship it back to Hungary, let them do it and wait for them to ship it back to me. I will say, as of this morning, I chose the latter option and just scheduled my DHL pickup,
[00:11:38]20210303 0933 Guest : [00:11:38] Yeah, I was going to say, I mean, I think that cause you and I are both fairly technical people, uh, uh,
[00:11:47] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:11:47] for you.
[00:11:48] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:11:48] Right. I was going to say, but like, where I draw the line, like, I’m like very much like a software person. Right. Um, and, but, but as soon as you say, like, I need you to J tag something or I need you to solve or [00:12:00] something, and I’m going to take that solder.
[00:12:03] Like I need to solder a point so I can flash the firmware. That’s when I’m like, okay. You know, I’m, I’m going to mess something up. Right. Um, like I don’t even know if you have a soldering gun. Uh, you probably do, but who knows?
[00:12:17] 20210303 0933 Brett: [00:12:17] Like I, like I used to, I used to modify like police scanners to pick up like taxi cab transmissions and stuff like that. Like just little hacks, you know, it’s basically like changing one connection and suddenly you open up new bandwidth and I can do it. I’m just, I haven’t done it for 20 years.
[00:12:35] I have no confidence in it. And. I like, um, I’m good at welding, but when it gets down to that really fine stuff, I don’t have feeling in my fingertips and I don’t have steady hands. And it just seems like I would, I would fuck it up.
[00:12:51] 20210303 0933 Guest : [00:12:51] Yeah, I can, I can, uh, respect that. I mean, I think that the thing with this too, like, even with me. This is one of the things that I’ve kind [00:13:00] of looked at it with, like wanting to like build and have like a custom keyboard, which is a little bit different than what the, the, uh, uhk, uh, two is. Um, but this is like one of those things where I’m like, ah, you know, uh, why I’m like, I don’t know if I want to do this or not.
[00:13:14] I feel like I could. Solder the points on the board to add in the switches, because that would, that, that would be more time consuming than it would be, you know, having to be very specific and, you know, and whatnot, it would be like, there’d be an opportunity for me to mess something up. But a lot of that really would be kind of a paint by numbers thing.
[00:13:34] It would just be really time-consuming, but for what you would need to do, if you need to be like, it’s a very fine point sort of thing, where I’m.
[00:13:48] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:13:50] Well, that was weird. It’s like, uh, it’s like we were super tired and then my internet dropped out completely and we just said, fuck it. [00:14:00] Let’s sleep. And we’ll put it out a day late.
[00:14:04] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:14:04] Right. And so what’s, what’s happened since then, and it’s kind of amazing that your internet died. I’m not gonna lie. I was a little annoyed because I was so tired and I was like, I woke up for this, but. I mean, I was relieved, but then it took me like 30 minutes to get back to sleep. So it was one of those things, but no, but I am also I’m happy because I was totally not on my game at all for like the first segment of our show.
[00:14:35] But now I’ve had some sleep. I finished my second, like eight hour hosting shift at Microsoft ignite. I had some sleep and now like, I feel energized. How are you feeling?
[00:14:48] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:14:48] I feel the same, but that’s still better than you were yesterday. So
[00:14:54] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:14:54] For sure. For sure.
[00:14:56] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:14:56] you wait within like 30 seconds of when, when I [00:15:00] first called you before we started recording, you told me I was being too animated. I had said like five words and you’re like, calm down.
[00:15:08] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:15:08] I know I was so grumpy, but also tired. It was one of those things where like everything was loud and yeah.
[00:15:16] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:15:16] I usually hide. I would, I would have canceled doing the podcasts if it had been me.
[00:15:23]20210304 0832 Guest : [00:15:23] Well, I didn’t, I didn’t like, I didn’t feel like I could and I was just like, I’ve committed and yeah. So
[00:15:30] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:15:30] I also wouldn’t have been able to get through like an eight hour live hosting thing. I just, I don’t have it in me to put myself through that kind of thing.
[00:15:41] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:15:41] Yeah, no, I mean, it’s, it’s not for everyone for sure. So,
[00:15:46] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:15:46] so, you know what I did last night,
[00:15:48] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:15:48] What was that?
[00:15:49] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:15:49] I slept on a very nice mattress.
[00:15:52] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:15:52] Oh, tell me about it
[00:15:54] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:15:54] I should. I feel like, I feel like I’m getting paid to, to mention this now. [00:16:00] Um, I should, I should bring up the read. Okay. So. As you are fully aware. We are often very tired. Uh, my brain doesn’t always let me sleep. And Christina has, uh, uh, sometimes very crazy work schedule.
[00:16:16] But when my brain cooperates, my body loves my helix mattress. I, uh, I went to their website and I took their two minute quiz and they matched my body type and my sleep preferences to what they called the midnight mattress. I love that it’s not a one size fits all kind of company. And, uh, and after a few months of sleeping on this midnight mattress, I can say they got it.
[00:16:38] Absolutely. Right. So if you had to helix. Helix sleep.com/overtired. You can take the quiz yourself and find out what mattress you should be sleeping on. They have soft, medium and firm mattresses, mattresses. Great for cooling you down a few sleep hot and even a helix plus mattress for plus sized folks.
[00:16:59] Oh, and they were [00:17:00] awarded the number one best overall mattress pick of 2020 by GQ and wired magazine. So if you want to sleep better and be less overtired. Take the quiz order the mattress, your match too. And it will come right to your door, shipped for free. And if you use our link helix, it’s offering over-tired listeners up to $200 off all mattress orders and two free pillows.
[00:17:23] Just go to helix sleep.com/overtired. There’s a 10 year warranty and you get to try it out for a hundred nights. Risk-free they’ll even pick it up for you. If you don’t love it. So, if you’re ready to sleep better, that’s helix.com/overtired. You won’t regret it. And we got through two ad reads, uh, on, uh, we’re going to call this an off week
[00:17:46] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:17:46] Yeah. Yeah, this is definitely not like a super normal week, but we did get through, um, two ad reads.
[00:17:53] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:17:53] I feel like we, we really gave it our all.
[00:17:55]20210304 0832 Guest : [00:17:55] Yes, 100%.
[00:17:57] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:17:57] I mean, we gave all, we had to [00:18:00] give, if I were a sponsor, I’d be like, you know what, they really, they really put in the effort, this was worth it. Did you know that? Uh, so back in the seventies, they predicted, uh, that the within 10 years world population was going to become too large to sustain.
[00:18:21] And like, it was. Going to be the end of the world. And now they expected a baby boom during COVID. We didn’t get it. People are too concerned about both health and finances. So there’s like, Oh, we’re on the verge of the opposite crisis. Now, uh, young people, aren’t having enough babies to support the massive number of old people that are getting to retirement age.
[00:18:45] Now,
[00:18:49] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:18:49] That’s
[00:18:50] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:18:50] did you have?
[00:18:51] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:18:51] this, this is none.
[00:18:55] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:18:55] me either. I got of his sect me. I feel like I really screwed over the boomers.
[00:19:01] [00:19:00] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:19:01] Yeah, no, I, I mean, I I’ve been very clear with everyone in my life that I’m not going to be a parent. So like,
[00:19:11] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:19:11] go ahead.
[00:19:12] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:19:12] I was just going to say, like I always said, and this was like true. I was like, if my sister needed a surrogate, I would have done that. Right. But that would have been, and I meant it when I told her I would do that because we thought that she would never, we didn’t think that she would be able to take carry.
[00:19:31] Um, that has obviously not been the case and she is going to have a baby in may, but that was always what we assumed. And. As I’ve gotten older and she’s gotten older, I kind of even assumed I was like, all right, well, I guess I got out of this whole surrogate thing, but like, that was my whole thing. I was like, if I had to be someone surrogate, like my sister, or like a very like good, like same-sex couple like good friends or whatever, who really couldn’t find anyone else fine.
[00:19:58] But that was [00:20:00] always like, as much as I was willing to do.
[00:20:02] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:20:02] I, uh, I was on my way to the, uh, to LARC toys to buy Easter, like just little basket stuffers for my nine, uh, nieces and nephews between Ella and I, we buy for everybody. So between the two of us, we, I think. Let me see five, three, eight to buy for eight kids, which seemed like a lot. And on our way to the store, I get a text message, a group text from my sister saying she’s pregnant again.
[00:20:34] And she’s having another baby. And I got to say, I felt like it w like it was a slight against me. Like I felt like they were just trying to make my life harder. I immediately made it about me.
[00:20:49]20210304 0832 Guest : [00:20:49] I mean, I think that this is actually probably why you got the sec dummy,
[00:20:54] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:20:54] it really is because I’m a selfish asshole.
[00:20:59] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:20:59] but you’re [00:21:00] aware of that. Right. So that’s a good thing. So, right. So there you go.
[00:21:05] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:21:05] Yeah. Right. I always said I would adopt, you know, like try to curb the population. I didn’t realize that we were going to run short of people. Yeah, well, so I don’t expect to live. I don’t expect the world’s actually going to be in any kind of a non dystopian state by the time I retire.
[00:21:26] So not really concerned about having enough young people to drain the blood from.
[00:21:33] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:21:33] I mean, I’ve totally would like, I think Peter Sheila’s a monster, but if the whole, like, you know, Blood transfusion thing really did like revive like youth. I would be down with that, but that would basically be like the only reason I would be upset. Like if we had like, I mean, obviously we don’t want the world to end because we don’t have enough people, but I also feel like a lot of this could be curved simply by China lifting its one child policy,
[00:22:00] [00:21:59] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:21:59] well, so
[00:22:00] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:22:00] which they’ve done, you know, they’ve had a soft limit on that, but it’s still not something that’s like overly encouraged or that happens very frequently.
[00:22:09] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:22:09] It’s not that the world is short of human beings. Like there are just, there are way too many people. It’s just that we structured our economy, uh, such that having a F a F an influx of working age people to support retired people. Is, uh, is vital. And I feel like if, if things were a little more, uh, like socialist and it, and it weren’t, if everyone wasn’t scraping by right now, it wouldn’t be a huge problem.
[00:22:43] I’m not an economist. And I don’t, I don’t understand all the math behind it, but it seems to me like there are actually enough people in the world we’re just really bad with money.
[00:22:54] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:22:54] Yeah. I mean, I think that’s probably the biggest thing and it’s also, it’s one of those things that it’s, I mean, on the one hand, I [00:23:00] do agree with you that in general, we should probably go more. Socialist, although I’m going to be a bad leftist and say that I don’t actually believe in total socialism. Um, I, I think that that is very problematic as well.
[00:23:14] There’s, there’s a balance and there are some Scandinavian countries in some European countries that do it well, but I actually am not a full-blown like socialist in like the, the Marxist sense or whatever, but, uh, there was a time, you know, before. 401ks. And, and everybody kind of was like, do it on your own where you worked a job and you got a pension. And that was a thing. And there are still some careers that have that. Right. But it’s very rare. And I feel like there’s a balance that could be done to put the burden on. Cause, cause the thing is, it’s also not like we were running out of money. Like we have corporations and we have certain like very, very, very, very wealthy individuals who have an outsized proportion of that wealth.
[00:24:00] [00:23:59] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:23:59] outsized.
[00:24:00] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:24:00] And so it’s one of those things where I’m kind of like, okay, you know, like the, the right, like, like the, like the, the complete, like free market. I don’t even want to say capitalist because I don’t even believe it’s truly capitalist argument, to be honest, but like the total, like free market argument about, you know, 401k is, Oh, you know, you can choose what you can do with your money and this and this and this.
[00:24:20] And it’s like, yeah, but I would much rather have a guaranteed, you know, um, Retirement. If I work at a place for a long period of time or something going into, you know, a, a fund, um, then the fact that, I mean like you and I have paid into social security, which we will never see a dime of ever, which is
[00:24:41] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:24:41] I, I heard. I heard that the big, the, like, that was kind of like a definitive, like 10 years ago, they were like, yeah, this generation generation X, uh, isn’t there, we’re going to run dry, but that seems to have, uh, uh, become more of a point of [00:25:00] debate. Uh, in the last five years I I’ve heard, heard actually you’re going to be fine.
[00:25:06] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:25:06] I don’t think so. I mean, generation X, some, some, some generation X people might and generation X. We also should note that it was actually a very small generation in terms of the number of people. And, and it’s a unit it’s period of time, which is up for debate. There are obviously a lot of millennials, which I’m part of, and then there are tons of the zoomers.
[00:25:29] I feel pretty confident that, you know, I’ve got another 30 years minimum of working and that I’m not going to see a single cent of anything that I paid into. Like not a single cent, like no question.
[00:25:44] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:25:44] Yeah, I don’t foresee myself ever retiring. I can’t, I have too much debt to live on social security. I have like zero, I split my 401k, uh, like, like quit my job. [00:26:00] So my 401k stopped being contributed to then I got divorced and I split it with a D D and then I went broke and I was paying like $1,200 a month in health insurance and started.
[00:26:12] Uh, tapping into my 401k early and I got nothing. Like I, I have no, uh, unless things really turn around and I get like a really high paying job in the next few years. I’ll probably work into my eighties. It’s about if I live that long, my family does not have a history of living past seventies.
[00:26:35]Yeah. This is fun.
[00:26:38] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:26:38] I was going to say, I was like, all right, I’m not, I’m depressed now. Um, we’re working, we’re going to work forever. Um,
[00:26:44] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:26:44] depressed.
[00:26:45] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:26:45] basically.
[00:26:47] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:26:47] Uh, the other news that I, I, that caught my eye since we had, you know, 24 hours to really think about what we’re going to talk about. I can only read the first four [00:27:00] paragraphs of this article because I don’t pay for the wall street journal. It never will. Um, but it says.
[00:27:06] That Google plants, the stop selling ads based on individual browsing across multiple websites. So do you know anything about this? Cause that is, that’s like, that’s a huge part of the ad revenue for a huge portion of internet advertising.
[00:27:24] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:27:24] Yeah. So I looked into this and it is, it seems to be.
[00:27:31]There seems to be a lot of debate over whether like, like what this actually means, like, like what definitive, like purposes is going to have. So, so Google came out and basically said like, it, it, um, it like clarified its plans basically around targeted advertising, basically saying that it’s not going to use other ways to track users, um, around the internet, once it in support for, uh, for, uh, third-party cookies in Chrome by early 20, 22.
[00:27:58] Um, [00:28:00] And, and then like in, they had a blog post and it said something like I’m paraphrasing from CNBC here, because this came out after the, the wall street journal, um, uh, article came up, which raised more questions. Uh, they basically says, um, they’ll use privacy preserving technologies that rely on methods like anonymization or aggregation of data.
[00:28:19] And that they, they did announce in January that they were going to end support for third party cookies. And, um, In, in its, in its digital advertising system and within the Chrome browser within two years. So on the one hand, like this is good because third party cookies have kind of been, um, uh, Scouts on, on the, the world.
[00:28:42] On the other hand, I have questions about how much Dionne D anonymization and, and other stuff, some of these, like. Ways that they claim are going to be privacy focused are actually going to work.
[00:28:58] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:28:58] T uh, [00:29:00] anonymization D anonymization would be horrifying.
[00:29:03] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:29:03] No, exactly. No, no, no. Well that that’s, I guess my point, I guess my, my buy, I said it wrong. So like, yeah. I I’m I’m I’m I’m not, I’m not really sure how well these anonymization and aggregation things will work. If that makes any sense. I, I wonder if those will still be able to be de anonymized.
[00:29:20]To the point that they can still be tied back to an individual.
[00:29:26] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:29:26] Yeah, well, and I guess, like, I see that the ad industry, if you look at, uh, like targeted ads, uh, that, that come through Facebook and Instagram, they’re very much focused on, uh, purchase history and sentiment. And I think sentiment tracking is, uh, it’s invasive to privacy and I’m a little more worried about.
[00:29:52] Sentiment tracking as far as, uh, it just feels so, uh, invasive to me, [00:30:00] uh, that I’m more worried about that than I am about them. Knowing that I visited certain websites.
[00:30:06] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:30:06] Right. I mean, I think that, that my concern has always been, and I think the broader concern has always been like, It’s one thing for data, for it’s one thing for, for Facebook or Google or Apple or Microsoft, or whoever to know about your, your habits like that they’ve tracked across their properties. It’s another thing when they sell that data to other people that can then be aggregated and uses a profile for you like that, I think is honestly the bigger concern.
[00:30:30] And that’s always been the bigger concern for me is the fact that, and that’s been the way that it’s worked with these third-party cookies. Is that. You’ve been able to build a really robust profile from those cookies that have been on basically every website and the Google, you know, was really kind of a leader and they didn’t create it, but they certainly exploited it.
[00:30:47] Um, as part of their, their ad networks to basically be able to create a remarkably robust profile that could then be sold to various ad exchanges to target you [00:31:00] however you want it. And so I feel like. Getting rid of that, I think is a definitely a good thing. And I I’m, I’m glad that Google is doing that.
[00:31:09] Um, but I still feel like, as you said, a there there’s there’s sentiment, there’s targeted, there’s other stuff, and I’m not real clear. And the way that the wall street journal report was written, I’m not real clear that like Google has said, Oh, we’re not going to be using any other methods, you know, to kind of get around, getting rid of, of third-party cookies.
[00:31:30] But I’m still not real clear on like, okay, but your first party approach, how much data and information do you know from that? And you’re saying that you’re going to aggregate it, but do you still really know this stuff? And is this still tracks somewhere? You know what I mean? Like, I don’t know. I’m, I’m, I’m sort of skeptical because, because they’re talking about.
[00:31:46] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:31:46] trust Google.
[00:31:47] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:31:47] Hell. No. Now, you know, I mean, cause they’re calling this thing, your privacy sandbox, uh, I’m now reading directly from the wall street journal and said, Google says it will use new technologies. It is, um, it is developing with others. That’s always [00:32:00] problematic to developing with others and what it calls a privacy sandbox to target ads without collecting information about individuals from multiple websites.
[00:32:08] Once this technology analyzes user’s browsing habits on their devices and allows advertisers to target aggregated groups of users with similar interests or cohorts rather than individual users. Google said in January that it plans to begin open testing of ad buying using that technology in the second quarter.
[00:32:23] So the total like cynic in me is saying that a, what they just described is kind of that sentiment. Um, I guess like tracking sort of like targeted advertising that you said that you were worried by. So it’s not as if you’re not still going to be getting advertising targeted to you. It’s just that ideally this profile of who you are and all the things and all the millions of data points that are available about you don’t get sold on mass because they’re tied to a third-party cookie on your machine, but it’s not as if you, and based on the things that you do online, aren’t [00:33:00] still going to be getting targeted advertising.
[00:33:01] They’re just claiming, Oh, well, we won’t know who you are. So.
[00:33:04] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:33:04] mean, you’ll be, you’ll be sold as part of a group, which is more, more anonymous than being directly targeted by advertising. So that that’s a step in the right direction. Yeah. Uh, w I had mentioned, uh, I think it was on this show that I, I was gonna stop sending, tracking pixels with email newsletters, but then I heard from a bunch of people doing everything from like full on email marketing to sending out church newsletters, who said that they actually, the data they got just from knowing open rates.
[00:33:40] What is useful enough and it was not like it, they, nobody seemed to think it was actually a privacy invasion. So no I’m torn. I think I will send them because it is handy to know open rates.
[00:33:55] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:33:55] No. I mean, that’s kind of my feeling on a newsletter. I also feel like if I’m being honest, like [00:34:00] I’m creeped out by what superhuman and some of the other pixel tracking things do where you can be like, Oh, this person opened your email X times or this person. And we talked about that. Like that bothers me.
[00:34:10] And I have friends who will write as a gotcha in their stories. You know, using the service. I, I found out that this person read the email. I sent them multiple times, but didn’t respond. And I’m like, okay, first of all, kind of fuck off. Right? Like, that’s not cool. If someone did that to you, some of these same people would be writing about how, what an invasion.
[00:34:29] It was like some genuinely, some of these same people would be writing those things. So part of me, I’m kind of like, okay, fuck off with that. But on the other hand, I also feel like with the newsletter, especially if I’ve subscribed to it, uh, it might be a little bit different if it’s a marketing newsletter that I did not opt into, the just kind of came to me because I bought something from somewhere.
[00:34:47] But if I make the decision to subscribe to a newsletter, I implicitly feel like I am giving my permission for there to be. A way for people to track openly like, like open rates and [00:35:00] also like what links I click, maybe I’m overly estimating the rec the rest of the public on that. I’d love to hear from our listeners, like what they think, but, um, I’m not, I don’t like being, you know, tracked and targeted and I certainly would not mind if there was a pop-up.
[00:35:17] In male clients that basically let you know that those pixels are there. Like, I, I wouldn’t be mad at that. Right. Even, even if it comes across as like shaming, like that’s fine with me. I feel like you could include even like a, an addendum or a small print, like in the newsletter to be like, yes, I use a tracking pixel it’s for this reason.
[00:35:36] Um, and, and people could do with it, what they wanted, but like, I’m not personally bothered by a newsletter that I choose to subscribe to you. Choosing to track whether I’ve opened something or not. And, um, you know, what links I’ve clicked. And in fact, I just kind of assumed that they’re going to do that because why else would they want me to sign up for an email newsletter?
[00:35:57] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:35:57] Yeah, well, so like I talked about how [00:36:00] MailMate has a built-in blocking and a big red bar that shows up and I’ve realized maybe that bar needs to be less red. Uh, like when I opened an email and the top, like half inch of it is a bright red bar that it makes me feel this sense of like, Oh no, they’ve done something awful and they’ve been caught, but maybe that bar should just be a little.in the corner that says we, we blocked a pixel or notifies you that there is a pixel in the, I feel like it’s a bit severe now that I’ve gone through this whole conversation.
[00:36:36] I just feel like it’s a bit severe.
[00:36:40] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:36:40] Yeah, yeah. I’m with that. I mean, I, like I said, I do think services like superhuman are super gross, but, um, I, I don’t know. I feel like if you subscribe to, if you make the decision to subscribe to like an email newsletter, I’m personally okay. With people tracking whether or not it opened or not, because as you said, like it’s not, it is [00:37:00] useful information.
[00:37:00] And I don’t know, I kind of feel like the same way with people who are like, Oh, I don’t need, I don’t want any analytics on my website. It’s like, I mean, okay. I guess, but that, that also strikes me is. You know, simplistic and I don’t know. Um, also I’m like, I’m, I’m, I’m, uh, I’m personally like a curious motherfucker, like I’m, I’m nosy and I want to know the things, but again, like, I think there’s a difference too.
[00:37:26] It’s like, I don’t know who this individual was. Right.
[00:37:28] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:37:28] don’t have there, you don’t know who the individual was and you’re not trying to collect and sell that data. You’re using it for your own own purposes internally. And I do think there’s a difference there. It’s just when people use Google analytics, there’s, you know, the concern that it’s not just being used internally, they’re just adding to Google’s data set,
[00:37:50] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:37:50] Right. Which now, apparently, which is not an an, you know, fair thing. But now apparently, you know, if Google is not going to be selling that information, [00:38:00] maybe it becomes easier to understand. I’m not sure, you know, that the thing is, is a lot of times, even when you have, when you block third party tracking, Google analytics, doesn’t get blocked because it’s considered a first party cookie.
[00:38:09] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:38:09] really? Huh? This Ghostery black Google analytics.
[00:38:14] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:38:14] Yeah, it does. Uh, if you, if you directly enable in some of those scripts, like go straight in and you block origin, if you have certain privacy settings on. You know, from certain privacy lists and there are certain other ones that will, but in terms of like what the browsers do by default, they don’t block it.
[00:38:28] Not even Mozilla, like they don’t block Google analytics. And in fact, Firefox, I’m sorry. Like I know that we love Mozilla here, but they’re big fucking hypocrites because a, they sell a VPN service that they get money from. That’s not even like a real good one. From what I understand, there’s there’s like some weird.
[00:38:44] Stuff with it or maybe I’m wrong. Actually, I take that back. I think that the one there with is fine, but they sell a VPN service. So that in and of itself is sketch the own pocket, which, you know, they there, and now they’re selling, you know, sponsored, um, you know, tabs on, on the homepage, but they also have fucking [00:39:00] Google analytics on their website and on their blogs and stuff.
[00:39:03] So, you know, they talk about, Oh, we, we don’t want to have any sort of tracking of this and that. And then they track. Stuff on their own website. And I’m like, right, because it can be useful, right? Like to me, don’t take like a completely like anti any tracking line. If you’re going to be tracking shit yourself, like at least be open and honest and be like, it’s nuanced and it’s complicated.
[00:39:25] And we don’t want to sell this information or have it tied to a specific person, but we are also nosy motherfuckers.
[00:39:32] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:39:32] you know, with Google analytics, you can turn on and off demographic tracking. Which greatly, if you turn off demographic tracking, it greatly reduces the amount of personal information that you’re gathering. I feel like in a case like Mozilla, that could say we use Google analytics to track, uh, very anonymized details about traffic, but we’re not collecting all of this other data that Google [00:40:00] makes available.
[00:40:00] Um, And, and like, I mean, we’ve talked about alternatives to Google analytics, which I do feel like Mozilla would, uh, be wise to take advantage of. But
[00:40:13] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:40:13] I mean, if nothing else from an optics perspective, like to me, it’s not even like it. Cause I don’t, I don’t care. Like Missoula can do whatever the hell Mozilla wants to do. I mean, awesome. Zilla. Let’s be very, like, let’s be very clear is only in business as I both a nonprofit and like as a for-profit entity because of Google.
[00:40:29] So. Like literally all of their money comes from Google and they laid off a bunch of people because Google cut how much they give firebox every year. And, you know, cause they give them like $200 million a year. Um, so you know, there there’s massive
[00:40:45] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:40:45] Firefox money?
[00:40:47] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:40:47] because Google is the default search engine in Firefox.
[00:40:51] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:40:51] yeah.
[00:40:51] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:40:51] And when, and when Yahoo was trying to still be a thing, Yahoo paid them more than Yahoo was bought by oath and or [00:41:00] Yahoo, Yahoo was then became oath or whatever. And. Had to like, they basically ended their agreement with Firefox early. I think there was some sort of settlement where Firefox probably got paid out what they’d been promised, even though the agreement didn’t continue.
[00:41:15] And, um, then they resigned with Google and then Google, because Google is in a much greater position of power has like cut how much they are going to give Firefox, but they still give them like $200 billion a year. So yeah.
[00:41:30] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:41:30] do you want to hear a super funny joke that Al made up this morning?
[00:41:34] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:41:34] I do.
[00:41:34] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:41:34] Do you know what Pangea is the supercontinent. Like prior to, uh, the, like the F the earth, as we know it today, like all the continents were joined
[00:41:45] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:41:45] Yeah. It was all in Africa. And then it split up right.
[00:41:48] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:41:48] And I mentioned this randomly in con uh, conversation over coffee this morning and her immediate response without batting an eye, she said, uh, I want to start a [00:42:00] band called Pangea just, we can have a really good breakup story. That’s my girlfriend. That’s,
[00:42:08] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:42:08] That’s actually awesome.
[00:42:09] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:42:09] that’s the kind of wit you can expect from her early in the morning. I’m talking like six, am she? Yeah. Anyway.
[00:42:19] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:42:19] That’s actually, that’s very clever. That’s really good. And like, that’s very dry. I like that a lot.
[00:42:24] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:42:24] She, uh, she works in a direct care. It’s called she, she works with developmentally challenged people and she has, uh, a specific house that she works at. And. Um, as part of, kind of COVID relief there, they take long drives and they go visit, uh, community members and they do like driveway waves and, and distance greetings.
[00:42:48] And, uh, they listen to music while they travel around and she asked me, I think it was. Two days ago, uh, to remind her, which, uh, which Taylor Swift [00:43:00] album Christina had recommended, she listened to because she was gonna make that the driving around music. So I’ll have to check back in with her and see if she listened to folklore or not.
[00:43:09] But she, she she’s trying. She really is.
[00:43:13] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:43:13] I appreciate that. Thank you, L.
[00:43:15] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:43:15] Well, okay. So we did two halves. One half I would say was, was superior to another half.
[00:43:22] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:43:22] Yeah. Um, and, uh,
[00:43:25] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:43:25] which, which one I think was better. Cause
[00:43:26] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:43:26] no, I think, I think the latter half was better. Uh, definitely. I think, I think half number two, uh, you, you, you want to talk about bunch.
[00:43:34] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:43:34] I I’ll just keep shifting it for it’s become like a total obsession for me. Uh, part of it is because I’m waiting on Fletcher for so much stuff with NBA, ultra that all of my development energy has to go somewhere. And I’m getting very close to making bunch of commercial app. Uh, so if we ever run out of things to talk about, I can always talk about what I’ve just added to bunch that [00:44:00] day.
[00:44:00] Uh, but we don’t have to get into it right now.
[00:44:03]20210304 0832 Guest : [00:44:03] I am curious, and we don’t have to super get into it right now, but I mean, you’ve been talking about this for the last couple of weeks that you’ve been thinking about making this commercial. What does that change like? Does that change from your development approach? Like I’m assuming that you would have to kind of refine the UI more.
[00:44:18] Would there have to be some onboarding? Does that change like permissions that you need for stuff like.
[00:44:22] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:44:22] yeah, so I did, as part of the current beta, I added a fancy preference panel and a whole bunch of onboarding, uh, smoothness and, uh, re we wrote a ton of the documentation. Uh, but as far as permissions go, the stuff that. It does. And the way that it works kind of makes sandboxing impossible. Uh, so we will join the ranks of things like better touch tool and Hazel that really have no chance of existing in the Mac app store.
[00:44:55] I don’t think Hazel’s in the Mac app store.
[00:44:57] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:44:57] No, it’s not,
[00:44:58] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:44:58] but it’ll be [00:45:00] in that kind of automation niche. There was a long conversation, not long, but there was a conversation on the discord channel about whether it’s niche or niche. And,
[00:45:11] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:45:11] I think it’s niche.
[00:45:13] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:45:13] uh, most people agreed with niche apparently in Webster’s dictionary, the primary pronunciation as a ch in it.
[00:45:21] Um, we were also talking about. Oh, we went through a lot of words, uh, disagreement, like words that confuse people. But niche was my question. Cause I, I like every time I say it, I feel like I’m getting it wrong. But anyways, in that automation niche, um, of apps that, that can’t be Mac app store apps, but still, uh, I hope I can gain some, some fraction of the popularity is something like Hazel.
[00:45:49]20210304 0832 Guest : [00:45:49] Yeah, no, I hope so too. I like that. Um, actually it’s funny. One of the cool, I mean, this is, this is for, for windows users, which I realize is not, uh, UN like this is the definitely the minority of [00:46:00] our audience, but, um, this was actually a cool thing that was announced at ignite this week is that, um, power automate desktop, which came out in October.
[00:46:11] But. Would cost money to do kind of anything with which is an app that basically is it’s a desktop app that runs, you know, on windows that lets you build in, you know, a lot of kind of automation tools to either create reports or, or do macros to do stuff. You know, even if it’s like Photoshop actions or, um, you know, sending emails or grabbing stuff from websites or whatever.
[00:46:32] Um, it’s a, it’s a pretty cool app. It’s actually now free, um, on windows 10. For anybody, if you want to do some of the more advanced stuff like scheduling and running stuff, kind of like headless or whatever, then it costs some money. But the, you know, the basic kind of, you know, version or whatever, um, is now going to be available to everybody for free, which is kind of cool.
[00:46:56] So if you’ve been a windows person and you, I wanted to be able to [00:47:00] do stuff like what Hazel does, uh, check that out.
[00:47:04] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:47:04] Yeah, that is cool. Yeah. I will tell you the, the last feature that I completed that’s ready for publication in Bunche is a long tail. Like, so here’s how it started. I needed as part of this smoother onboarding process, I needed a bunch to be able to pop up, uh, an HTML, uh, view of here’s what just happened.
[00:47:28] Uh, here’s how you edit the file. Click here to open preferences, et cetera. Um, And so I built that and then I was like, wouldn’t it be cool if this could, uh, also just view text files and then that became, wouldn’t it be cool if this could tail log files and then it was wouldn’t this be cool. If they could translate ANSI escape, colors into NS, attributed strings for display, and then wouldn’t it be cool if you could position, if you could tell it exact coordinates in size in which display to put the window on and then define whether it was like [00:48:00] wallpaper level.
[00:48:00] Or desktop level or a normal window or a floating window. And I added all of that. So now there’s like a, uh, a text command. You can write display system log, give it some parameters for foreground and background colors and, and make it a desktop window. And you can like pop up a visor to tell your system log when you open a bunch and then it closes with a bunch that’s the kind of quality you can expect from commercial.
[00:48:28] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:48:28] Very nice, but that’s also like a ridiculously nerdy and like amount of, uh, I kind of love it though.
[00:48:36] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:48:36] Yeah. I have a very, I have a very specific target audience in mind for this app. I gave up on trying to make it something the general public could use, because let me come on. It’s, you’re creating automation with text files, which is basically scripting and that’s a limited audience right there.
[00:48:52] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:48:52] I was going to say, it’s it’s for people who want to script, but don’t want to write Python themselves.
[00:48:58] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:48:58] Well, like, there’s a [00:49:00] lot of things that you just can’t easily do with a shell script that requires some kind of, uh, objective C Swift interface to the, to the operating system. So this basically creates almost a scripting language that makes it more direct interaction like that possible. But anyway,
[00:49:18] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:49:18] No. I mean, this is, this is basically, this would be kind of like a, a DSL, like a domain specific language, honestly.
[00:49:24] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:49:24] yeah, yeah. So anyway, uh, I, I, we both have places to get to and, and, and people to be, so thanks for, uh, thanks for getting some sleep, Christina.
[00:49:37] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:49:37] Well, thank you for, I guess, your internet going out. Although a quick question. How long was it before it came back up? Cause that had to be annoying when it just went out.
[00:49:45] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:49:45] eight, eight took I rebooted, nothing came up and then I think it was about 45 minutes. I waited, uh, I was just about to call the server per service provider and, uh, and deal with getting someone out and then it came [00:50:00] back up. So I would say a total of about, just less than an hour.
[00:50:05]20210304 0832 Guest : [00:50:05] Okay. All right. Well that makes me feel a little bit better. That’s still sucks, but I’m glad that it wasn’t like an all day thing. So, uh, sorry that your internet went out. I am sort of happy. Because now we were able to have like, uh, we’re still kind of in an off week, we were able to have like a much more normal second half of the show.
[00:50:20] So
[00:50:21] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:50:21] w we, we basically rescued the show.
[00:50:24] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:50:24] basically that, that should probably be the episode title. The show was saved.
[00:50:28]20210304 0832 Brett: [00:50:28] maybe I’ll maybe I’ll cut in the part where you are. You yelled at me. It’ll be fun.
[00:50:35] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:50:35] I’m sorry for yelling at you. I was very tired, but I’m very sorry for yelling at you. Although I didn’t yell at you. I was just like, you’re so loud.
[00:50:43] 20210304 0832 Brett: [00:50:43] You said calm down. I need you to calm down. All right. Well, uh, I’m glad, I’m glad you’re better rested. I hope you get even more sleep, Christina.
[00:50:52] 20210304 0832 Guest : [00:50:52] Thank you, Brett. Hope you get some great sleep too.
[00:50:59]
[00:50:59]

Feb 25, 2021 • 1h 1min
228: Your Favorite D-List Podcast
Music on vinyl, porn on paper, and mixed-race same-sex couples finally get their own emojis. And we talk about keyboards, of course.
Sponsors
Nebia: The Nebia by Moen Spa Shower uses 45% less water while providing a serious upgrade to your shower time. The first 100 people to use code overtired at Nebia.com will get 15% off all Nebia products. Just head to Nebia.com/overtired.
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Show Links
Pretty 8 Machine on vinyl
Apple’s new emoji
NYT: How Y’all, Youse and You Guys Talk
keyboards.io
Daft Punk Splitting Up After 28 Years
Spy pixels in emails have become endemic
Fathom Analytics
Plausible Analytics
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Check out more episodes at overtiredpod.com and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Find Brett as @ttscoff and Christina as @film_girl, and follow Overtired at @ovrtrd on Twitter.
Transcript
Brett
[00:00:00] Brett: [00:00:00] Welcome to overtired. I am Brett Terpstra. I am here with Christina Warren. How are you, Christina?
[00:00:10] Christina: [00:00:10] I’m pretty good, Brad, I’m pretty good. Uh, I am like, it’s one of those classic overtired things. Cause I am a little tired because I’ve been like super busy the last couple of days, but yeah, I’m good. How are you?
[00:00:21] Brett: [00:00:21] I’m over arrested. I’m fucking depressed.
[00:00:24] Christina: [00:00:24] Oh, no.
[00:00:25] Brett: [00:00:25] it’s, it’s been like a week now. Uh, like I think I talked about it last time, but it turned out like, Like I always end this like very mild manic episode for like two weeks. And I didn’t, it was so mild. I didn’t realize what was happening and well, almost three weeks, really.
[00:00:46] So all of a sudden it like ended. And I’ve been sleeping a lot and watching a lot of Netflix and my internet went down yesterday and it was this nightmarish moment of like, I’m depressed. [00:01:00] I just want to keep the cats warm on the couch. And now I don’t have Netflix. What reminded me of a time before streaming television.
[00:01:11] Um,
[00:01:12] Christina: [00:01:12] You’re like, wait, I ha. Yeah. Cause you’re like, wait, I have to watch things on these, these disks now, which you might not even have.
[00:01:19] Brett: [00:01:19] even have anymore. Like I re I, it made me remember the days when yeah. I had like a DVD collection and I could like go back and used to have hard copy porn. Do you remember those days? So long ago,
[00:01:33] Christina: [00:01:33] Oh, that’s hilarious. Hard. Copy
[00:01:35] Brett: [00:01:35] they used to print that stuff on paper and it didn’t even move. It was so weird. It was so weird.
[00:01:42] Um, yeah. Speaking of, no, I’m just kidding. I’m not going to turn that into a sponsor read right there.
[00:01:49] Christina: [00:01:49] No. I was going to say I don’t, I don’t know if it would work kind of for one of them.
[00:01:54] Brett: [00:01:54] Hey, would like, because there is actually a Radic picture available on [00:02:00] audible.
[00:02:00] Christina: [00:02:00] Oh, see, I was actually thinking like the shower
[00:02:03] Brett: [00:02:03] Oh yeah. We could. Oh, so many possibilities. Yet, we’re going to have some tastes and class, and we’re going
[00:02:11] Christina: [00:02:11] We are, we’re not going to do that.
[00:02:12] Brett: [00:02:12] we’re talking about like the Holocaust or, or sexually assault or something before we make
[00:02:18] Christina: [00:02:18] Nope. I was going to say. I was going to say, that’s what the sponsors, uh, pay us the, the very small dollars to do. That’s really what it’s about. Like, it’s, it’s, it’s the Holocaust and in sexual assault that you want to be your segues, not, not, not pornography because this is America, right? Exactly.
[00:02:38] Brett: [00:02:38] So today’s episode is brought to you by audible and Nebia by Mowen what we’re going to tell you about that later, because right now I want to talk about pretty eight machine.
[00:02:50] Christina: [00:02:50] Okay. Tell me about this because I just, I’m just looking at you. I saw this in our, in our notes. I was just looking at the vinyl and I’ve never heard this. So tell me all [00:03:00] about this because it looks great.
[00:03:01] Brett: [00:03:01] Yeah. A couple years ago, uh, this guy, uh, who goes by inverse phase on band camp put out, actually, it’s been like it’s been years, but a while back, uh, 2011. no, no, no, no. He, he S I’m sorry. I’m, I’m looking at his bio. He started doing chip tunes in 2011, but the, uh, this album. I can’t remember what year it came out, but it’s been a little while.
[00:03:29] Anyway, it’s a, it’s a note for note chip tune cover of the pretty hate machine album by nine inch nails. And it is, it is it’ll blow your mind. If, if you appreciate eight bit chip tunes and you appreciate nine inch nails in any pit to any level of, of a fandom. It, this is an amazing album and he just, uh, this year launched a campaign [00:04:00] to put it out on vinyl and he is already.
[00:04:04] He’s art. It like it’s definitely happening. He hit his first goal, like right away. Uh, and then he set a second goal of like 500 records and he has met that. And at this point he’s actually, uh, reaching out and trying to get it into record stores and game stores. And, uh, so if the current pledge amount is to actually, uh, fund.
[00:04:32] Getting this into stores. So he’s still looking for pledges despite having he’s he’s, he’s reached, uh, $19,000 in pledges, but I would jump on this if you, uh, if you own a turntable, that’s the third, the third prerequisite as you have to have it. Well, I mean, I suppose you could own it and never listened to it.
[00:04:53] You could own
[00:04:54] Christina: [00:04:54] No, no, you totally could.
[00:04:55] Brett: [00:04:55] to it on band camp.
[00:04:57] Christina: [00:04:57] Exactly. I was going to say, cause I’m buying it right now. [00:05:00] And um, if you pledge and it’s already going to go through, so you’re going to get it. Uh, but you will go ahead and get the digital version and you could be like me where you got really into vinyl this year, even though almost never listened to any of your vital.
[00:05:13] Um, you’ve just spent like hundreds of dollars on Taylor, Swift albums on vinyl, the same album. Uh, but also I actually was buying vinyl releases before she released. Nine different versions of folklore on vinyl.
[00:05:30] Brett: [00:05:30] I have a friend who has a band called the sweat boys, or just sweat boys. And it is, um, it’s a synth pop band that kind of like, they have this whole shtick where they have like, uh, guys in. In leotards lifting weights on stage while they perform. And it’s just like high energy synth pop stuff.
[00:05:53] And I love him enough and I actually enjoy their shows enough that I bought their last album on [00:06:00] vinyl. And I’ve never actually played the vinyl because I own it all. It’s all an on my iPhone.
[00:06:09] Christina: [00:06:09] No,
[00:06:09] Brett: [00:06:09] even have one of their CDs. And for me, that’s as retro as vinyl is.
[00:06:16] Christina: [00:06:16] Honestly, it’s, it’s harder. Uh, I think sometimes like to define a good CD system like I have, cause I do have like a Blu-ray player that I got, uh, for my, uh, PC and my Mac, um, like an external that I had somebody mod, so that it’ll, it uses a certain version of making B making KB so that you can rip stuff in, uh, ultra, um, Hi-def without, um, dealing with weird DRM stuff.
[00:06:43] Um, cause there are certain, it’s a weird thing. Like basically LG makes the only Blu-ray drives that exist right now, at least for, uh, like. Mac and PC, but they have different firmware versions that will let you do certain [00:07:00] things on it. And they like charge extra. If you want to actually be able to rip the UHD copies and then they want you to use certain software.
[00:07:08] So if you want to use programs like, uh, make them KV. Or handbrake or things like that to actually be able to extract the whole thing without having deal with weird prietary garbage, then you have to use usually a modified version of the firmware. So I had somebody who flashed it for me and it wasn’t and put it in an external chasses and it was very inexpensive.
[00:07:30] So I have that, but like, that’s what I would have to use to listen to a CD at this point.
[00:07:37] Brett: [00:07:37] Last my, my, my car before this one had like a six disk changer that I never used. Um, and I think. I think the car that my girlfriend has now does have a CD player. Uh, and we bought that car from my mother and just yesterday for the first time I ever, she [00:08:00] opened up the little tray in the console and there’s all these like gospel CDs in there, singing, gospel songs.
[00:08:11] Christina: [00:08:11] Oh, yeah. Oh my God. My dad that’s my dad. My dad has like. Like white lady music taste. And I’ve always made fun of him about this because it’s hilarious to me. Like he loves Elvis Bob’s Elvis and Johnny Mathis and all this shit, but also like he was really into, um, this is just so funny. Cause like, okay, this is why it’s funny.
[00:08:35] My dad is like, even now in his seventies, he’s. A big tall guy who, you know, it’s very much appears like a man’s man type of guy. Right? Like he he’s very much, like you can tell that he played football in college and that he like is a, a sportsman. And like, it’s just, you know, like that’s, that’s the thing you don’t expect him to be really, really [00:09:00] into, um, uh, Vonda Shepard who did the music and ally McBeal to the point that he had both.
[00:09:08] Both of her albums and used to have them in the car. And I used to have to listen to that shit on my way to eight. Like when he would drive me to school in high school,
[00:09:16] Brett: [00:09:16] Yeah, parents are funny.
[00:09:18] Christina: [00:09:18] Yeah. And I was like, what? It also turned out. Cause I always thought it was my mom. It was not. Um, when I was growing up, I was always fascinated with my parents’ eight track collection because I was like, what is this shit?
[00:09:30] And, and, and some of them, um, you know, I’d already degraded and didn’t work, but some of them were in good shape, but they also had their record collection. And it was very weird to me because they had this Olivia Newton, John album on eight track and on vinyl. Same album. And I’m like, why is now? Now? You know, it makes sense because we have become accustomed to the industry making us double-dip right.
[00:09:56] Like our generation, especially mine. Like I, [00:10:00] there are certain things that I’ve bought. Multiple times because I’ve had to, and with streaming, obviously that makes it different. But so at this point you will buy the vinyl copy to support the artist, right? Like as, as this pretty eight machine thing, right.
[00:10:15] Like I am, uh, I could have just bought the band camp thing, but I just also backed it. Cause I want the vinyl because you want to support the creator because it it’s like a cool kind of Chatzky. But like in my, like in the seventies, He had both copies and I’m like why? And I always assumed as my mom and no, it was my dad.
[00:10:34] My dad was just really into Olivia Newton, John.
[00:10:37] Brett: [00:10:37] so weird.
[00:10:39] Christina: [00:10:39] I know,
[00:10:40] Brett: [00:10:40] Did you see the song or the song titles? I’m pretty at machine.
[00:10:45] Christina: [00:10:45] uh, I’m looking at it now. I just, I just bought it. So,
[00:10:49] Brett: [00:10:49] Headlight IO a terrible lie. Downloading it.
[00:10:56] Christina: [00:10:56] Oh my God, this is so good. And, [00:11:00] uh, and that’s awesome. So, so he’s now, yeah. He’s way, way past his funding goal for the original thing. And I don’t know how much he needs to get a ticket into other stores or stuff, but, um,
[00:11:12] Brett: [00:11:12] Yeah. He sent out an email yesterday. I can’t remember what all it said. No, but he was talking about like the, the, how hard it is to get things into record stores these days.
[00:11:23] Christina: [00:11:23] yeah. Yeah, no, I mean, which. Pandemic aside, like they’re actually doing really well. Um, at least like the indie places, I mean, comparatively, right? Like it’s interesting how much like vinyl, there’s a boom, but there’s also like an issue of, I would think the bigger issue less would be about distribution and would more be like, do you have enough physical copies that you can get to to the stores because what’s happened at least based on what I’ve read.
[00:11:52] And I don’t have a link for this. Uh, I think. There’s been some stuff in the New York times and some other places, but what’s happened. And I, I bet, I [00:12:00] bet that we have some listeners out there who know, who know more is that there are only a few places that do a good quality job of being able to make the vinyl.
[00:12:09] And the demand has gone up so much that it’s difficult to do, you know, uh, to get like press time, frankly. Um, like that’s one of the reasons, at least, I mean, this is all I can assume is that, so the Taylor Swift stuff, she has delay, like it took me, I don’t know. I think I got like, so folklore came out in the end of July and it was the, it was December before I got all the vinyl.
[00:12:42] Um, Copies. So like she had like eight, I think on her website or something or seven or whatever, then target had a special edition and the target one got there pretty quick, because for it to be in target, it had to be. You know, already mass produced, but, um, all the different colors because of the different [00:13:00] color variants she chose to use, they clearly had not produced any of them.
[00:13:05] And, and I don’t even know if they’d produce samples to be totally honest. I think this was one of those things where like, they put it up on the Shopify when she like. Surprise drop the album. And then she was like, Republic slash universal. You figure this out now. And they were like, uh, okay. Because it took months and, and, um, some of the, actually most of the, the color variants were only available for like a very limited time, um, for folklore or not folklore forevermore, she.
[00:13:34] Only had I think one color of the vinyl. And that was my first instinct. I was like, Oh, you, you would clearly bitten off more. You could more than you could chew and fucked up with folklore because you realized in like the ensuing months, we can’t make this much vinyl, especially with these different colors.
[00:13:51] Uh, and then for the release of fearless, that’s coming up. That is an interesting one. I, the, my big. Theory. And the reason why it won’t be [00:14:00] released until April is because of the vinyl lead time, because she’s wanting to charge for this like gold vital copy, and they don’t have that in mass. And the way that the billboard rules work now, uh, you have, you can’t like do pre-orders the way that they used to.
[00:14:16] So it’s one of those things where like, they have to actually have like a, um, it has to physically get to you within a certain date. So now it’s a pre-order rather than a. You buy it in December and you still don’t have your vinyl copy of evermore because it literally hasn’t been pressed yet. And it could be the summer before you cut it.
[00:14:37] So, um, that she obviously is going to deal with, with things on a larger level, because one of the biggest artists in the world, but if. They can’t find the, the vinyl, like the machine time for her. Then I have to imagine if you, you need to have a certain word borders to be able to get a pressing to that you could even distribute one or two copies [00:15:00] to a lot of different local music stores.
[00:15:02] At least that’s my guess.
[00:15:04] Brett: [00:15:04] Admit when I put pretty eight machine on the list, I did not think it was going to turn into a Taylor Swift conversation, but we managed it.
[00:15:13] Christina: [00:15:13] We did well. I mean, I can, I can turn anything into Taylor Swift yet. Um, but no, this is exciting.
[00:15:20] Brett: [00:15:20] to tell you, so I had never listened to your mood mix before. Cause I didn’t, it, it just, I don’t, I don’t have time
[00:15:29] Christina: [00:15:29] don’t care?
[00:15:30] Brett: [00:15:30] well, it’s not, I care about you.
[00:15:33] Christina: [00:15:33] No, I understand.
[00:15:34] Brett: [00:15:34] I don’t care that much about Taylor Swift,
[00:15:36] Christina: [00:15:36] No, I understand.
[00:15:37] Brett: [00:15:37] uh, uh, yesterday morning, uh, I mentioned that I had never listened to it and I was like, well, we could listen to it now before you record.
[00:15:46] And, uh,
[00:15:48] Christina: [00:15:48] It’s so sad.
[00:15:48] Brett: [00:15:48] so we put it on and it was funny because at first the first song was exile and Al said, damn it. Maybe I do like Taylor Swift.
[00:16:00] [00:16:00] Christina: [00:16:00] Yes. Yes.
[00:16:02] Brett: [00:16:02] then the next one came on and her response was no, this reminds me a lot of, uh, uh, tampon commercial.
[00:16:10] Christina: [00:16:10] Yes.
[00:16:11] Brett: [00:16:11] And, uh, ultimately we both got really depressed by it and,
[00:16:17] Christina: [00:16:17] Sorry about that.
[00:16:18] Brett: [00:16:18] yeah, no, I w I’m not going to hold you personally responsible.
[00:16:22] Uh, it turned out not to be great morning music.
[00:16:27] Christina: [00:16:27] No, no, I would have told you that. Cause I it’s it’s it’s a, it’s a folklore mood mix. Right? So, so the whole thing was to fit the whole. So how that came up with somebody on Twitter was like, I like this. What are some other. You know, songs like this, and originally he wanted Taylor step. And so it was very tailor heavy, but I went ahead and I was like adding in some other artists in there too, which is why there’s some Smith and there’s, uh, you know, some, uh, death cabin and there’s, um, you know, uh, like other, I think I even did put, I actually did put a Ryan Adams [00:17:00] cover on there even though it’s terrible as well.
[00:17:02] I’m sorry. His cover of this love is really, really good, uh, and, and fit like the motif perfectly. So, um, Yeah. So yeah, not, not good morning mix also not great if you’re going through a depressive phase. Sorry about that. But very much on brand.
[00:17:18] Brett: [00:17:18] it’s okay. We survived. We survived. It’s all good.
[00:17:23] Christina: [00:17:23] I just, I just love that she like goes from like maybe I do. And then she’s like, no, this is like a tampon commercial. Here’s what I would say to elbow L um, listen to folklore and evermore because a lot of that is way more like, um, uh, exile than it is. Any of her others, like that’s more the vibe than any of her other like pop stuff.
[00:17:45] So if you’d like that there, I think especially evermore really linked into that. And so you you’d probably really like that album, so
[00:17:56] Brett: [00:17:56] Speaking of listening to stuff.
[00:17:59] Christina: [00:17:59] great segue.
[00:18:00] [00:17:59] Brett: [00:17:59] I know audible is the leading provider of spoken word entertainment and audio books ranging from bestsellers in new releases to celebrity, memoirs, languages, motivation, and more like original entertainment. And now podcasts. I, I have a podcast.
[00:18:15] Christina: [00:18:15] I do too. I have a couple podcasts. Weren’t we on audible? I wanted that Ottawa.
[00:18:20] Brett: [00:18:20] we not? I don’t
[00:18:21] Christina: [00:18:21] We’re not,
[00:18:21] Brett: [00:18:21] I don’t know how to get on audible.
[00:18:23] Christina: [00:18:23] no, we gotta get, we gotta be like, More famous and, and get some of that audible Wondery money.
[00:18:31] Brett: [00:18:31] But we, we do, we do both listen to audible
[00:18:35] Christina: [00:18:35] We love audible. This is why I’m like, Hey, call us. But yeah.
[00:18:40] Brett: [00:18:40] But, uh, they have a new plan called the audible plus and with an audible plus membership, you get full access to the plus catalog, which is filled with thousands of titles across different formats from audio books to popular and exclusive podcasts to unique audible originals, like the words plus music series a you can listen [00:19:00] offline anytime, anywhere.
[00:19:02] And you can even squeeze in a workout or a guided meditation without having to go to a gym or a class. Uh, I just started, uh, like I was talking last time we did this read, actually I was talking about how I use my audible subscription to listen to a whole bunch of black female scifi and African futurism authors.
[00:19:24] And I just started another book by Nettie Accora for, um, and it’s really good. Uh, uh Kado which. Um, it’s young adult fiction, but I’m young at heart and I
[00:19:38] Christina: [00:19:38] Well, yeah, well, and like, if we’re being totally honest in the fiction genre, like why a has kind of eaten the world and a lot of it is really good.
[00:19:47] Brett: [00:19:47] Yeah. It, yeah. I, uh, I’m often surprised to realize that the book I just finished was classified as Y um, I, I, I don’t know if that says more about why a [00:20:00] or if it says more about me, but
[00:20:02] Christina: [00:20:02] So it’s more about why, but yeah.
[00:20:03] Brett: [00:20:03] You start anything good lately?
[00:20:06] Christina: [00:20:06] Yeah. So I just, uh, was listening to actually, this is fairly recent, uh, TV’s new golden age, which is, um, basically like. All about a TV, like from like what’s considered like the second golden age period of like 1999 through the last, like two decades. And so, um, this is from, uh, uh, film and television professor Eric or Williams, um, who basically is, is talking about what’s, what’s kind of been referred to as like the third golden age of television.
[00:20:37] And, uh, so that’s extremely my, my, my fish. So yeah.
[00:20:42] Brett: [00:20:42] I just finished, um, uh, Keegan, Michael Keegan. What’s his name? Ki Keegan. Michael Key. Cause it’s key and Peele.
[00:20:53] Christina: [00:20:53] Right, right, right, right.
[00:20:54] Brett: [00:20:54] Um, Keegan, Michael Key of key and Peele did a 10 part [00:21:00] audible series on the history of sketch comedy. That it was just him. Kind of discussing the long history of sketch comedy. Jading back to like the Greeks and Romans
[00:21:12] Christina: [00:21:12] Ooh.
[00:21:13] Brett: [00:21:13] it was, it was fascinating and also hilarious.
[00:21:16] And I would recommend it anyone it’s included with your audible plus subscription.
[00:21:22] Christina: [00:21:22] Oh, I’m going to listen to that. That’s great. Um, that’s awesome. I was listening to one. What would I listen to? So remember tiger King. When we were all obsessed with that.
[00:21:30] Brett: [00:21:30] I, I recognize that other people were obsessed with it. Yes.
[00:21:34] Christina: [00:21:34] Okay. So there was like, uh, an interesting kind of like accompany and like, it wasn’t, it’s not officially related, but it’s part of the story, but there’s like a, um, again, I think it’s like a 10 episode kind of deep dive. Um, Audible original series. Like, again, it’s one of those things that’s part of your audible plus subscription, where you can get way more detail and your interviews and like deep reporting, like actual reporting than what was in the [00:22:00] Netflix series, um, about that whole case.
[00:22:02] And it was characters. So people are interested in that if you want to relive the beginning stages of this pandemic, uh, and, and like, look back fondly when we were all like obsessed with that stuff. That’s that’s another one. I’ll I’ll I’ll give a shout out to.
[00:22:16] Brett: [00:22:16] So with very little effort, you could easily get through any of these, a special audio plus original series in 30 days. And. If you go to audible.com/overtired or text over-tired to five zero zero five zero zero. You can get a 30 day free trial with everything you want to listen to. All in one app audible plus can truly become your playlist for life.
[00:22:42] So visit audible.com/overtired or text tired to five zero zero five zero zero. Uh, we’re we’re both obviously big fans of audible and really happy to have them as a sponsor. if they would just pick up our podcasts, we w we, [00:23:00] uh, yeah.
[00:23:02] Christina: [00:23:02] We could do an original podcast for them, then that’s really what I’m kind of
[00:23:05] Brett: [00:23:05] Uh, what would it be? A Taylor Swift podcast? I’m not sure I could get down with that.
[00:23:10] Christina: [00:23:10] I don’t know. We could come up with something.
[00:23:12] Brett: [00:23:12] We should do a history of, Oh man. We could do a history of computing podcasts. Where we
[00:23:20] Christina: [00:23:20] that’s a good idea.
[00:23:21] Brett: [00:23:21] talk about our teen years
[00:23:24] Christina: [00:23:24] Right?
[00:23:26] Brett: [00:23:26] Yeah, I dunno. We could pull it off. You’re interesting enough.
[00:23:30] Anyway,
[00:23:32] Christina: [00:23:32] So are you dude actually?
[00:23:35] Brett: [00:23:35] so Apple has a leaked, not leaked, but announced their next round of emoji updates. Have you seen these.
[00:23:47] Christina: [00:23:47] I have, um, I’m not on like, whatever the beta is that you need to, to run it because I don’t have time to run betas right now on my phone, but I had seen it. It looked pretty good,
[00:23:59] Brett: [00:23:59] their [00:24:00] bearded ladies.
[00:24:01] Christina: [00:24:01] which is cool.
[00:24:02] Brett: [00:24:02] It is, uh, and it’s actually like, it’s interesting. The facial features, they didn’t just put long hair on the bearded man emoji. It actually has like narrower jaw line. It is very much like feminine features with masculine hair and it comes in the full range of skin tones.
[00:24:28] What surprised me? Not that they did it, but that it didn’t exist before is interracial gay couples. I didn’t realize that wasn’t already a thing.
[00:24:41] Christina: [00:24:41] Yeah, I’m guessing. And I don’t know, this would be something that Jeremy, uh, Verge of Emojipedia fame. What would know more about since he’s on like the Unicode board and is like Mr. Emoji himself, but what I’m guessing is that they were, for those emoji, they were [00:25:00] defaulting to like the, the yellow color, which is kind of like the neutral, like.
[00:25:05] No race and that that’s what they were doing. And now what they’ve done is they’ve gone ahead and they’ve added the fact that you can select skin tones, but they’ve made it so that if you wanted to, you could have multiple, you know, skin tone options. Uh, what I guess, cause I don’t know how the implementation of this would be I’m I don’t know if they’re going to have like the however many combinations you could have.
[00:25:29] Um,
[00:25:30] Brett: [00:25:30] The infinite number of shades and hues, you could combine.
[00:25:34] Christina: [00:25:34] it’s not, it’s not that it’s that they have like five different tones. So I don’t know if it’s one of those things where they have, you know, uh, I guess to be, I guess 10, I can’t do the, I’m not, I can’t do the math in my head right now. It’s too early. Um,
[00:25:49] Brett: [00:25:49] We don’t get paid to do math.
[00:25:52] Christina: [00:25:52] I mean, not for this, but, you know, so I don’t know if they could do like all those combinations, if they’re going to do that on the picker, or if it’s going to be like a more limited kind of [00:26:00] subset for same-sex couples that does obviously make it a little bit easier in so far as you, you, well, you know, cause it’s male, female, then you do have to have like one of each and then one of each.
[00:26:12] So you’re doubling the number. And, and from that, it’s not even that like, okay, it’s hard for them to make the emoji, but I would think it’s like, okay, how do you in a selector make that an easy thing for people to access. Right. So it’s not even a matter of like, yeah. Cause you can like, have somebody commissioned the art, no problem.
[00:26:29] But it’s like, how do you make that selection? 100%, which is why I assume that they just had it as, as the yellow color. You know, just, just everybody’s a Simpson and, and that’s what they, they went for. But no, I think it’s cool that they have, you know, taken on the UI, uh, concern to have interracial, um, a gay couple.
[00:26:50] Brett: [00:26:50] Yeah. They also remove the blood from the syringe emoji so that it can now represent a vaccine.
[00:26:58] Christina: [00:26:58] Okay.
[00:27:00] [00:27:00] Brett: [00:27:00] Yeah. Then they changed the headphones to be the white beats headphones.
[00:27:05] Christina: [00:27:05] Of course.
[00:27:06] Brett: [00:27:06] you know, just branding,
[00:27:07] Christina: [00:27:07] Yeah, I was going to say, just like, you know, the watch is the Apple watch and the, you know, the phone is the yeah. Um,
[00:27:15] Brett: [00:27:15] Speaking of vaccines though, the Johnson and Johnson one as we speak is nearing FDA approval as a one-shot vaccine. And well, not as effective as the other two. It, it does increase the number of doses that could be available in June by a hundred million. And that’s not a hundred million divided by two.
[00:27:38] It like you would have with the other vaccines, that’s a hundred million extra doses. So that’s good news.
[00:27:45] Christina: [00:27:45] No. That’s great news. So my parents got their second dose last week,
[00:27:50] Brett: [00:27:50] Girlfriend. Just got, I should say L we’ll just call her by name. I’ll just get hers this week too. Her
[00:27:56] Christina: [00:27:56] Hell yeah. That’s that’s awesome.
[00:27:59] Brett: [00:27:59] The second one is [00:28:00] supposed to cause more, uh, illness. Yeah. Side effects.
[00:28:05] Christina: [00:28:05] Yeah, my parents, my parents had like an itchy arm and they were kind of lethargic the second day where they were fine.
[00:28:10] Brett: [00:28:10] Yeah. And L did not have, like, I always she’s like super sensitive to that stuff. So I, I was prepared for the second dose or kind of wrecker, but it didn’t, she, she came through it fine. She’s like, you shouldn’t be scared. And I’m like, I wasn’t scared.
[00:28:27] Christina: [00:28:27] Yeah, no, it was funny. Cause my parents were kind of the same thing. Like they were like, I was glad they were telling me, you know, how well it went or whatever. Um, but I was not even like, it didn’t even enter my mindset to be like concerned. I was just like, get the shot. Um, you know, like. Get it, but, um, but yeah, that’s what I was hearing.
[00:28:48] Like they basically said they both had itchy arms and then the next day they were both a little bit more lethargic than they had been. Like the first dose. They didn’t have anything, this one a little more, but, and they had Madonna, uh, the [00:29:00] Madonna, um, one, but. Mo merger, not yeah, whatever Madrona who’d, who knows.
[00:29:06] So, um, I’ve apparently also, as, uh, as I’m saying, this I’ve been told the way that I say Penn is, uh, was how, um,
[00:29:15] Brett: [00:29:15] Very Atlanta.
[00:29:16] Christina: [00:29:16] a apparently yeah.
[00:29:18] Brett: [00:29:18] How do you say M I R R O R. Mirror. Okay. I’ve I’ve realized, uh, thanks to some Facebook posts that in the, uh, in the Northeast, at least, uh, it’s often a single syllable just mirror, mirror.
[00:29:33] Christina: [00:29:33] Mirror here. Yeah. I could see that like, like the space shuttle. Um, yeah, I don’t know. It’s weird. So, you know, like, remember how like the, the New York times had that dialect quiz, you probably don’t. Okay. Okay. So this was like, this was a long time ago, but it was a very famous thing where the New York times made this interactive dialect quiz that apparently for many people could precisely like, indicate exactly where [00:30:00] they grew up, like to a T.
[00:30:02] And it was one of those things where it’s like 20 questions and you answer how you say certain words and other different colloquialisms or whatever anyway, because how I speak. Is so disconnected from where I grew up. Like, I, I think I’m like the one person who totally like messed up the New York times dialect quiz.
[00:30:23] Brett: [00:30:23] Okay. Yeah, no, I don’t. I don’t detect a Southern accent on you. I’m no, uh, I’m no accent expert, which you can find some great YouTube videos on accent experts dissecting various, especially when they do like, uh, uh, actors portrayals and they dissect their,
[00:30:43] Christina: [00:30:43] Oh, yeah. I love that.
[00:30:45] Brett: [00:30:45] dialogue coaching. But, uh, yeah, that’s fun stuff.
[00:30:50] Christina: [00:30:50] No, that stuff is really fun. Um, I’m going to put a link to the dialect quiz in here.
[00:30:54] Brett: [00:30:54] Cool. Um,
[00:30:57] Christina: [00:30:57] Very cool.
[00:30:58] Brett: [00:30:58] so [00:31:00] you mentioned you may have gone down another keyboard, rabbit hole, and I feel like keyboards are almost deserve like a, a segment status on this show.
[00:31:09] Christina: [00:31:09] Honestly, honestly, they do, because between like you and like your, your ultimate hacking keyboard, and I told myself, I wasn’t going to get into this hobby, like told myself I wasn’t going to, and now I find myself, I’m still not deciding, like, I, I still. I haven’t pulled the trigger too hard yet. I think, I think I pre-ordered one that’s been on back order, but I don’t actually know.
[00:31:32] I know that I hit the buy button, but it hasn’t shown up on my credit card and I didn’t get an email. So it’s one of those things where I’m like, did I buy this or did it not go through? And then I’m like afraid to buy it again because. Then I’m going to be stuck with like, you know, $130 keyboard. The second one that I don’t need to have, and I don’t want to have to deal with the return.
[00:31:50] So I’m waiting a couple of days to see if that actually like order went through or not. But in the interim, I like have been going down this rabbit hole where I was [00:32:00] like, okay, I have the key Cron, which is fine, but the, the key caps aren’t the best and maybe one, uh, Alderson switches. And then I’m looking at some options and I’m like, Oh, but I could design these things in these other ways.
[00:32:18] So I was like, well, maybe I’ll just get like a drop alts, but then they have like a custom. Um, aluminum like a new aluminum color that you could color way you can get, which I really like, which would look like really good with like, it’s like a light lilac that would look really good with certain key caps.
[00:32:36] And so I’m like, okay, well, if I got that, because it’s like $130, I don’t want to have to buy that on top of like the $200 keyboard. That seems dumb. So I’ll just. Kind of build my own from, from drop because they now sell the PCB separately to that still gets very expensive. But then in the interim I’m like, okay, well, do I want to get something else?
[00:32:57] Do I want to get like another type? So I spent a lot of [00:33:00] yesterday, very deep in the weeds, reading and watching actually a ton of keyboard review videos on YouTube. And I I’ve like. Resisted going too deeply down that rabbit hole, because I knew that this would be the sort of thing that it’s like shoes or PC parts, which I have now, like conquered that I’m like, this will just be another thing that like the obsessive compulsive side of my personality needs to collect them all.
[00:33:30] And then the board needs to spend money to feel things, product personality, like it’s a bad combination. So I’m trying to kind of talk myself out of it, but it is one of those things where I’m like, I could see myself really.
[00:33:42] Brett: [00:33:42] Have you
[00:33:43] Christina: [00:33:43] I could see myself. I’m trying to talk myself out of building the keyboard, basically.
[00:33:46] Brett: [00:33:46] have you seen the keyboard IO keyboards go to go to shop.keyboard.io. And they have a few different models that my friend, Jesse Atkinson swears by. [00:34:00] Um, I think he had the, no, I don’t remember which model he had now, but they have like a tiny one called the Atrius. That is like a S it’s it’s ergonomic, not split.
[00:34:12] It’s not two
[00:34:13] Christina: [00:34:13] Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. I’m looking at this. That’s cool.
[00:34:15] Brett: [00:34:15] but they have the model 100 that I think I actually tried backing years ago. Um, But it never happened. Uh, but now it says it’s coming in 2021, just in case you need more options. But I have always been curious about the, the, the drop, the alt, and they have another one. yeah, Alton control.
[00:34:40] They don’t have a delete.
[00:34:42] Christina: [00:34:42] No, not yet. They did just have an inter that’s like an entry-level one. And then there’s like a new one, which is like a 60%, which I don’t want. Um, I’d really like a 75%, but that other than the key Cron, they’re very limited. They’re very [00:35:00] limited. Like really there’s one from, uh, Keyboard bands that is like a KB 75.
[00:35:05] That is impossible to get right now. Like it is literally out of stock and that’s one that you have to build yourself and sold or yourself and whatnot, but they’re very few 75% keywords out there, even though I personally think that’s kind of the perfect size combination, but I like 65, 68 more than I like, um, 60% because I need my, um, navigation keys.
[00:35:31] My arrow keys.
[00:35:32] Brett: [00:35:32] You say solider? Is that a Southern thing or is that just a mispronunciation?
[00:35:39] Christina: [00:35:39] How am I supposed to say soldier solder? Oh yeah. That’s just a mispronunciation.
[00:35:45] Brett: [00:35:45] Okay,
[00:35:46] Christina: [00:35:46] That’s just how I’ve said it. Like my whole life. So that’s just, yeah,
[00:35:50] Brett: [00:35:50] Uh,
[00:35:51] Christina: [00:35:51] that’s just a mispronunciation.
[00:35:52] Brett: [00:35:52] into one of those with a friend that like I could totally see. It’s like when you’re, when you’re reading, especially when you’re younger and you see [00:36:00] words like rendezvous, like, and they’re not words you, you hear, or if you do hear them, they sound so different than they’re spelled that you don’t necessarily associate them.
[00:36:11] I thought it was pronounced Rendez service until I was like 16 years old. And I said it in a sentence and someone looked at me like I was an idiot and I was like, it’s Ron run. Does this, you know, like a place you meet up at a Rendez vis
[00:36:32] Christina: [00:36:32] and people like you mean a rendezvous? Yeah,
[00:36:35] Brett: [00:36:35] any sense.
[00:36:36] Christina: [00:36:36] totally. No. So yeah, no, no solder, which is, cause obviously I know that it’s called soldering gun. Um, but I’ve had sold her because that’s just a mispronunciation because I that’s one of those things that I very clearly. Set in my own head so many times before I ever heard it.
[00:36:53] And then actually it’s until you said this, that I like made that connection. I’m like, yep. I’ve been mispronouncing this my entire life. [00:37:00] Cool.
[00:37:01] Brett: [00:37:01] funny word. No, I’m not going to do another read yet. We did our last, our last episode, our sponsor reads through like five to 10 minutes long. We really, we really put our heart and soul into our sponsors.
[00:37:17] Christina: [00:37:17] If you’d like to sponsor overtired. Email
[00:37:21] Brett: [00:37:21] Well, we’ll do, we’ll dedicate 30 out of 60 minutes to talking about your product for the, for the benefit of our listeners, which I’m sorry to our listeners, what no sponsor read should be more than five minutes long. That’s crazy.
[00:37:36] Christina: [00:37:36] it’s totally nuts. And we don’t blame you for using the 32nd, like fast forward button on your pod catcher. That’s totally what you did. So it’s fair.
[00:37:46] Brett: [00:37:46] What, uh, turns out are I, like I put, uh, in our show notes, there’s a transcript of our, of our conversation. And in one of the newer [00:38:00] podcatchers the, the timestamps that I have in there. And I didn’t do this on purpose, but they’re actually clickable
[00:38:06] Christina: [00:38:06] Oh, cool.
[00:38:07] Brett: [00:38:07] can jump around the podcast. Because I don’t do chapter markers.
[00:38:11] Like someday I aspire to do chapter markers,
[00:38:16] Christina: [00:38:16] No. I honestly think timestamps are better because chapter markers it’s such a kludge.
[00:38:22] Brett: [00:38:22] we’re so scattered. Like
[00:38:24] Christina: [00:38:24] We are
[00:38:25] Brett: [00:38:25] anything that fits neatly into chapters. Like just now we went from talking about, uh, soldering to, to. Two podcast chapters with no real segue. It just happens.
[00:38:40] Christina: [00:38:40] 100%. And I also think like, frankly, like a chapters are difficult to create and B it doesn’t really fit our show, but see, and this is, I think the most important thing, uh, the way that people consume content. Now, at least the way that I do, like timestamps on YouTube are the currency that I kind of go by.
[00:38:59] So [00:39:00] that’s what I would be familiar with and would want from a UI standpoint war than like, or UX standpoint, I guess that’s what I would prefer then to chapter markers, to be totally honest.
[00:39:10] Brett: [00:39:10] Yeah, I don’t listen to podcasts. I have nothing to add to that particular conversation. I am really bad about listening to podcasts.
[00:39:24] Christina: [00:39:24] Yeah. I mean, I listen to a ton of podcasts and I usually, I never used the chat markers on them if they have them. But, uh, I do appreciate timestamps when that’s there, especially for shows like a accidental tech podcast and stuff like that, like that, that. Similar to us can be long. It can go into lots of topics.
[00:39:41] And because I do watch a ton of YouTube videos, I’m very, very happy whenever they have timestamps. And that’s actually why, when I do like my new show that I do, like every two weeks, like my developer new show, like I have my timestamps and I’ve done that for the last couple of years, even before YouTube had like a visual, like indicator kind of thing.
[00:40:00] [00:40:00] Um, I always had the timestamps in the, in the comments because I was like, This is useful for people. I appreciate it when I see this on other videos. So
[00:40:10] Brett: [00:40:10] You ready for a crazy like paradigm, like shift. Um, why didn’t daft punk just surreptitiously hand their, their helmets to like another duo and just let them carry on the tradition. This could have gone for hundreds of years.
[00:40:31] Christina: [00:40:31] I’m really sad about daft punk. Like. I mean, they hadn’t made a new album in a really long time. And I think the last collapse they probably did was with the weekend a few years ago, a Starboy, but I really liked that funk and discovery is one of my favorite albums ever. And I think their use of samples and the way other people sampled them is great.
[00:40:53] And I mean, you know, I don’t know. That was a really shitty thing to wake up to on a Monday morning to like add news. Like I [00:41:00] saw it on a group shot. It was in one of my group chats and that’s how I found out. And I was like, Oh fuck
[00:41:05] Brett: [00:41:05] Here we thought 2021 was going to be different.
[00:41:08] Christina: [00:41:08] totally. And I’m like, dammit, like, Well, it was, it was interesting because yesterday as we were recording this tiger woods was in a car accident and fortunately he survived, but it was one of those things where I don’t even particularly care about tiger woods that much, but I’m like, okay, we can’t have lost Coby.
[00:41:25] And then like tiger woods die. And like a car accident. Like that was just one of those things. I was like, no, that can’t happen. So. Um, he survived, but you know, apparently like really fucked up one of his ankles and had some other fractures just went with other legs. So who knows?
[00:41:44] Brett: [00:41:44] of life to get them out?
[00:41:45] Christina: [00:41:45] Yeah. Which is scary, you know?
[00:41:48] Uh, I mean, it’s, it’s, it’s. I don’t know, it’s not as bad as it sounds from what I understand how the jaws of life work, but it’s still not something you want. Like, you don’t want to [00:42:00] be like, so caught on a car that like have to use one of those contraptions to, to have access.
[00:42:06] Brett: [00:42:06] If I knew more about golf, I could probably make a very distasteful golf joke right now, but I, I don’t. So I won’t.
[00:42:13] Christina: [00:42:13] Yeah. I was going to say, I don’t really, I
[00:42:15] Brett: [00:42:15] insert, insert distasteful comment from Brett that Christina then has to recover from
[00:42:21] Christina: [00:42:21] Huh? Yeah. And insert a tasteful golf joke here. I like that.
[00:42:26] Brett: [00:42:26] I’m working on my filter.
[00:42:28] Christina: [00:42:28] Okay. Yeah. I appreciate that. So is, is that, uh, okay. So speaking of filters, is that a good segue to talk about the, the, the filter that you get from your shower experience?
[00:42:38] Brett: [00:42:38] Yeah. So that’s a, it’s a bit of a walk, but, uh, but yeah, I can, I can roll with that. I can roll with that. So this episode is sponsored by Nebia and they make a shower head that both Christina and I are using and are loving. And I want to tell you right off the top, that if you go to nebia.com/overtired, [00:43:00] uh, the first 100 people to visit that will get 15% off of all Nebia products.
[00:43:05] So let’s tell you about that shower though. It’s backed by some of the biggest names in Silicon Valley, including Tim cook. It’s designed by former Tesla, NASA, and Apple engineers who spent years researching and developing a superior shower experience that saves water and is anything but ordinary despite using 45% less water than your standard shower, head.
[00:43:29] It’s spree is 81% more powerful than the competition. It’s atomized, droplets, rinse, shampoo, and conditioner out of even the thickest hair. Can you attest to that? Chris?
[00:43:40] Christina: [00:43:40] If they care, but I have a lot of hair and I can definitely attest
[00:43:43] Brett: [00:43:43] have a lot of hair.
[00:43:45] Christina: [00:43:45] a lot of hair. So I can definitely attest to the fact that it definitely does rinse out shampoo and conditioner.
[00:43:52] Brett: [00:43:52] It slides up and down. It has 25 inches of up and down motion. So, uh, I don’t know about you, but [00:44:00] my girlfriend who has thick lustrous hair does not like to wash her hair every time she showers. Uh, so, uh, having a shower head that you can pull down below neck level and tilt forward. Kind of perfect, especially for girls.
[00:44:15] I don’t have to deal with this problem.
[00:44:19] Christina: [00:44:19] It’s really nice because usually like, you don’t have a choice. You’re like, all right, my hair’s going to get wet. I’m going to have to dry it anyway. I might as well shampoo it. It’s not always best for your hair, so yeah, you can lower it. Um, make it, you know, uh, like shoulder level, like you said, and still get clean, but not have to completely dunk your hair.
[00:44:37] Brett: [00:44:37] Despite being this high-tech amazing piece of shower artistry. It’s also super easy to install. If you can change a light bulb. You can install the Nebia by Mowen. Ha ha. How did your installation experience go?
[00:44:51] Christina: [00:44:51] It went very well. I did need a little bit of help just because I’m short and I needed, you know, to, to get it high enough. But this [00:45:00] was, and I’m genuinely saying this, like I’m not the most handy person. So I was a little bit concerned, but no, this was totally, uh, I think their app, like if you can change a light bulb.
[00:45:10] You can do this. I was like, am I going to have to get a bunch of wrenches and torques and other stuff knows it was a really simple installation.
[00:45:19] Brett: [00:45:19] the tools you need come right in the box. Yeah. So despite the massive savings on water and for me electrical bills, cause I have a, well, my girlfriend and I are both loving it. I enjoy taking a shower more than I ever have before. It’s a, it’s a great deal. It starts at one 99 and. Overtired listeners can get 15% off the first a hundred people to use the code over-tired at nebia.com will get 15% off of all Nebia products.
[00:45:48] You can just go to nebia.com/overtired that’s N E B I a.com/overtired. Check out what they have to offer and be one of the first a hundred people to use the [00:46:00] code overtired. So a huge thanks to Nebia for sponsoring this episode of overtired.
[00:46:06] Christina: [00:46:06] Thank you Nebia.
[00:46:07] Brett: [00:46:07] Um, so that brings us around to we’re. Wow. We got 50 minutes in already and I thought we weren’t going to have enough to talk about, so the BBC put out an article about email trackers and I already, so they say two thirds of all emails.
[00:46:28] Marketing emails sent now contained pixel trackers. And like, I guess this isn’t a surprise to me because I use MailMate on my Mac MailMate by default blocks, all of those and puts a huge red bar at the top of your, uh, your, your, uh, viewer window that says what it blocked. And, and so I have been fully aware.
[00:46:56] For a while now of how many emails I get that [00:47:00] contain tracking pixels. And I think like I’ve gotten into, uh, some email marketing myself lately. And like I tell my system to track opens and I’m pretty sure you can only track opens with a tracking pixel. So even I’m guilty of sending these things out to people.
[00:47:20] Christina: [00:47:20] Totally. And the thing is, is that I’m actually surprised that it’s only 75%, because I would think that if you’re sending out marketing stuff, that you have some sort of tracking of some sort, cause yeah, open rates are a thing. Uh, I always assume, and, and again, like, I think maybe this is just working in the industries that we’ve worked in and in our cynical nature, but I’m thinking like any link that I click in an email is being tracked like period.
[00:47:43] Brett: [00:47:43] for sure.
[00:47:44] Christina: [00:47:44] Right. You know what I mean? But I’m also thinking there’s like a track thing, then there’s a tracking pixel. The thing that’s always freaked me out. The service that I have. I’ve disliked, there are services out there which like for personal users will insert. A tracking pixel so that you [00:48:00] can find out if someone, how many times some of those read your email and then not responded and like left, left you on red.
[00:48:06] And this is a tactic that I’ve seen journalists use. Where they’re like, we reached out to this person. And even though they access the email this many times, they didn’t respond. I’m like, okay, fuck off. That’s not cool. Like, I’m not a fan of that. Like at all. And people who I like and respect have done that.
[00:48:22] And I’m like, ah, that’s not cool. Like I’m not into that game at all. And like, you I’ve used apps long before. Hey, which is a good email service I should say. I should know. Like, I do think that it’s good, but like, There are applications like MailMate and others that have alerted you in a blocked those tracking pixels for long before, you know, uh, like people who are much better at marketing, um, have, have made that kind of intimate cause celeb, um, I didn’t know that MailMate had the big, like red bar thing.
[00:48:58] Like it’s one of those things where I [00:49:00] by default usually had images turned off. On mail. And so it was one of those things where if you see an email that doesn’t have any HTML in it, and it is asking you to show, you know, images, you’re like you either have a tracking pixel or your signature is real weird in an either event.
[00:49:20] I’m not
[00:49:21] Brett: [00:49:21] how email signatures work on plain text emails?
[00:49:24] Christina: [00:49:24] right. You know, but it’s one of those things that I was like in neither event, I’m not pressing to show images. I was not so good luck to you, which is honestly, probably why those tracking pixel attempts like the different services that try to like play. Gosh, it like you’ve opened this this many times don’t work on me for an email newsletter or whatever.
[00:49:43] It’s different. Um,
[00:49:45] Brett: [00:49:45] so I am
[00:49:47] Christina: [00:49:47] I’m curious on your take on this.
[00:49:48] Brett: [00:49:48] I’m not going to, from the next time I send out an email newsletter, uh, for any of my mailing lists, I will not be using a tracking because I [00:50:00] like, so a while back I realized like I run or was running like Google analytics on all of my websites. And I was kind of addicted to all of the stats, but they didn’t really affect.
[00:50:16] Any of the decisions I made, all I really needed to know was how many people were viewing a post so that I could know what to charge advertisers. And I didn’t need to know all of that audience information. Yeah. So I switched to using fathom, which is a completely private, uh, it goes back to like the idea of just a web calendar and really
[00:50:43] Christina: [00:50:43] it’s it’s server side, it’s a server side one. Um,
[00:50:46] Brett: [00:50:46] doesn’t track any personal. And I made that change to all of my websites and I made it to like everything I had on my website that was gathering any kind of personal data I got rid of. So like visiting [00:51:00] my websites is a completely secure, uh, completely private situation. And, uh, it kind of, it offends me that I’ve been kind of breaking that rule with, like, I just started doing email marketing and I like, I didn’t even realize what all I was sending to people.
[00:51:18] So that’s going to stop because like, while I find those, uh, I found those stats. Interesting. I like to see, like, this is my percentage open rate and everything. It’s not going to change. Like what I write next time. I’m not running AB testing and like figuring out the perfect headline for my emails.
[00:51:36] That’s not my game. So I’m just
[00:51:39] Christina: [00:51:39] so you’re not going to do
[00:51:39] Brett: [00:51:39] collect it anymore. Okay.
[00:51:41] Christina: [00:51:41] No, which I think is fair. I will say I’m, I’m a weird person in that. It’s not that I love being tracked. And I certainly think that some of the stuff is a lot more serious than others. For an email newsletter. If I’ve chosen to subscribe to it, I don’t care as much.
[00:51:55] Like I’m not as offended by it. If that makes any sense. If somebody, if [00:52:00] somebody has a tracking pixel and they want to know their open rate, like I see the value in that. Um, and ideally how I would actually really like it to be used. And most places won’t do this, but I would really like people to see if you get an email X number of times for X period of time, and you’re not opening it.
[00:52:17] I would honestly like that to be a signal to the, you know, whoever is sending the emails out, it’d be like, send a thing and say, do you want to subscribe to this? And if you don’t interact, like remove you from the mailing list, like.
[00:52:29] Brett: [00:52:29] the software that I’m using, um, what’s it called? Cindy, uh, Cindy, which by the way is so good. Uh, it’s like it’s a PHP system that you run on your own server and it costs like 70 bucks to install it. And then from that point on, you can send 10,000 emails at a time for a buck.
[00:52:53] Christina: [00:52:53] Right. Cause it’s it’s it’s uh, because it uses, um, Amazons, um, uh, yeah, SES. Yep.
[00:53:00] [00:52:59] Brett: [00:52:59] you were to do the same amount of emails through like MailChimp, you would be paying hundreds of dollars for the same.
[00:53:08] Same setup. And so they do offer a house cleaning option where you can go through and people, if you have people on your list that haven’t opened the last seven emails, you can segment those and send just an email to those people to do exactly what you’re talking about and say, Hey, uh, here’s your chance to unsubscribe.
[00:53:26] If you want to get off the list, um, at a, at a buck per 10,000, I mean, I can. I can afford to have people not open the email, but, uh, it, it is nice to do a little house cleaning once in a while. And maybe people who have, uh, banished, maybe people who use a great service, like, um, SaneBox should sponsor us.
[00:53:49] I would talk about SaneBox all day, but, um, we’re such whores. I’m a whore. Um,
[00:53:56] Christina: [00:53:56] Well, you’re a whore. I was going to say, well, I mean, I’m, I’m horror. Jason’s [00:54:00] actually actually true story. I came up with this one new year’s day after real real horror moment. Uh, I, uh, I came up with the saying you can’t spell horror without Christina Easton, Warren, when I was like 21 and, uh, accurate. Um, so yeah.
[00:54:19] Yeah. You know, uh, we don’t, we don’t slut shame here. You mentioned fathom analytics. I I’ve looked at them. It doesn’t do what I needed to do, but I found plausible analytics, which is another one of, kind of the privacy focused analytic things. I like it for a couple of reasons. One, they have a hosted service, but they also have a cell post option.
[00:54:38] So if you want to have like a Docker container or whatever, and you want to run it the same place that you’re running, Cindy, you can do that. The reason I like it is that like fathom it doesn’t gather a lot of the, you know, the stuff that you want from, from Google analytics. But there are a couple of things that I do need.
[00:54:55] I’m an analytics program for some of the stuff that I do. I don’t need to know anything about who’s clicking on stuff [00:55:00] at all. And I don’t want to know that, but I do need to know like how many people clicked on a link, um, like, like a link that’s going someplace else. Like that is actually usable, useful information to me.
[00:55:09] Like how many, like, you know, links are being clicked and I don’t. I don’t have any qualm about that at all. And like mint used to do that. Like they used to have like a, you know, outbox thing and, and you can do that with Google analytics and you can do that with, um, uh, what is it, uh, um, uh, MIMO, what is it called?
[00:55:28] Um, Ms. Homo Miitomo it used to be, um, uh, started with a P, but I, but I can’t think of the name of it, Matilda, which is like the open source, Google analytics, but plausible. They actually reason I like them. They added it as a feature. Like they, they made it a feature because I did a PR request. Um, on GitHub, uh, for that, so that you can add like UTM links or whatever, you can create like campaign type of things.
[00:55:53] So like, like links, you know, tra like link, link clicks. Again, it’s not tying back to any user information, but just so you [00:56:00] can say this many people clicked this outbound link. Um, and, uh, so that is like one of those features that for me, um, for some of the few sites that I had set up for stuff like is an actual requirement.
[00:56:12] So, um, fathom is great, but, uh, but I wouldn’t give a shout out to plausible.
[00:56:20] Brett: [00:56:20] That was a whole bunch of shout outs. We just did at the end of our Taylor Swift episode. We, we, we, we kept this show too. If we finish in the next two minutes, we’ll, we’ll be under our, uh, our, uh, sensibly hour long show limit. We haven’t hit that for a while. We’ve been, we’ve been like an hour, 15 minutes show for awhile now.
[00:56:46] And apparently I put out one episode that came up as saying it was 16 minutes long when it was actually an hour and 16 minutes long. And I don’t know how I did that, but thanks to everyone who, uh, who gave it a shot anyway. [00:57:00] And didn’t assume it was like just a sponsored.
[00:57:03] Christina: [00:57:03] Right. It wasn’t just us talking about our illustrious sponsors. If, if those are things we will like clearly, um, denote that, um, a cause I believe the FCC requires us to and be because we’re not assholes.
[00:57:16] Brett: [00:57:16] It will be in the show title. If the show is nothing but sponsor reads, it will be titled sponsor read show.
[00:57:26] Christina: [00:57:26] Yeah,
[00:57:27] Brett: [00:57:27] Yeah. What was our last title? I think I called it a, I swear, we’re still a tech show. We do our best tech is not as thrilling as one might think. There’s a reason I don’t listen to tech podcasts. There’s just not enough. Taylor Swift in your average tech pod. Yes,
[00:57:47] Christina: [00:57:47] This is exactly it. There’s not enough. Taylor Swift. There’s not enough. Um, like chiptune nine inch nails, although see again, tech adjacent gypsy, you know, so we’ve always been a culture [00:58:00] show for nerds.
[00:58:01] Brett: [00:58:01] Yeah, that’s fair. That’s fair. Have you ever read saga? Do you get into graphic novels and comics?
[00:58:07] Christina: [00:58:07] Uh, I do sometimes, but no, I’ve never read saga.
[00:58:10] Brett: [00:58:10] I, uh, I just, I was just turned on to saga by a local bookseller. Uh, the guy who owns, uh, one of the local used bookstores. Posted a tee, a shirt that had this whole list of names. I didn’t recognize. So I Googled the whole list of names and discovered this comic called saga that now I have to check out. So I will update you after a trip to the local comic shop.
[00:58:34] And I’ll tell you how that goes.
[00:58:36] Christina: [00:58:36] Yeah, thank you very much. I appreciate that. Uh, what’s it about? Cause I’m always, those
[00:58:41] Brett: [00:58:41] I knew.
[00:58:42] Christina: [00:58:42] Okay. Well, so once you find out, let me know, and then I’ll know if I need to like look into this.
[00:58:48] Brett: [00:58:48] it’s it’s to the, I trust this guy’s taste so much, that justify fact that he would buy a t-shirt for this series makes me want to [00:59:00] read it with, with like sight unseen. I have no idea what I’m getting into, but I trust him.
[00:59:06] Christina: [00:59:06] I like it.
[00:59:07] Brett: [00:59:07] Darryl. Darryl is a good guy.
[00:59:10] Christina: [00:59:10] Shout out to Daryl.
[00:59:11] Brett: [00:59:11] Right on. I know he doesn’t listen to this show.
[00:59:14] Christina: [00:59:14] Of course he doesn’t. But shout out to Daryl anyway.
[00:59:16] Brett: [00:59:16] I’ll make him, I’ll be like, Hey, you want to hear your, you want to hear yourself? Get mentioned on a D list podcast. I’ve got just the show for you
[00:59:27] Christina: [00:59:27] We’re not delist where we’re ILA at best, but we’re, we’re getting there. Yeah,
[00:59:30] Brett: [00:59:30] have some, have some self-esteem
[00:59:34] Christina: [00:59:34] I do have,
[00:59:35] Brett: [00:59:35] you gotta promote yourself as the podcast. You wish you were. Like dressing for the job you want. If we, if we, if we present ourselves as D-list, that’s how you get to be, do you,
[00:59:50] Christina: [00:59:50] Okay. All right. All right. Fair enough. Honestly, we should probably like that should be the episode title, your favorite, your favorite dealers podcast.
[01:00:00] [01:00:00] Brett: [01:00:00] there you go. All right. Well, Christina, great chat.
[01:00:04] Christina: [01:00:04] Great chatting with you bread. And, um, I hope you feel better and that your depressive episode Inns more quickly than, you know,
[01:00:12] Brett: [01:00:12] episode took.
[01:00:13] Christina: [01:00:13] That you didn’t know you were having. Yeah, exactly.
[01:00:15] Brett: [01:00:15] Yeah. Oh, I decided if we ever make t-shirts, uh, they should say get some sleep, Christina.
[01:00:23] Christina: [01:00:23] Yes, that’s perfect. I would wear that.
[01:00:28] Brett: [01:00:28] like the t-shirt says get some sleep, Christina.
[01:00:31] Christina: [01:00:31] Get some sleep read.

Feb 17, 2021 • 1h 24min
227: We Swear This Is Still a Tech Show
Optical health is important. So is owning your music, at least if it’s worth hundreds of millions of dollars. Eventually we get around to talking tech, and not just because we were paid to.
Sponsors
Nebia by Moen. The Nebia by Moen Spa Shower uses 45% less water while providing a serious upgrade to your shower time. The first 100 people to use code overtired at Nebia.com will get 15% off all Nebia products. Just head to Nebia.com/.
Kitty Poo Club. Love your cat (or kitten) but hate cleaning litters? Kitty Poo Club delivers a fresh, recyclable litter box to your door every month. Right now, Kitty Poo Club is offering you 20% off your first order when you set up auto-ship by going to KittyPooClub.com and entering promo code overtired.
TextExpander. The tool neither Christina nor Brett would want to live without. Save time typing on Mac, Windows, iOS, and the web. Listeners can save 20% on their first year by visiting TextExpander.com/podcast.
Show Links
Why Taylor Swift is rerecording her songs
Ryan Adams Accused of Sexual Misconduct, Emotional Abuse by Seven Women
The mysterious death of Mr Misery
Tori Amos
Fiona Apple
Alanis Morissette
Boris The Sprinkler – Drugs & Masturbation
Quincy Punx – Eat A Bowl Of Fuck
A*Teens – Dancing Queen
GQ picked good Mac apps
Brett’s BPD Playlist
Christina’s Folklore Mood Mix
Apple Music version
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Check out more episodes at overtiredpod.com and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Find Brett as @ttscoff and Christina as @film_girl, and follow Overtired at @ovrtrd on Twitter.
Transcript
Brett
[00:00:00] Brett: [00:00:00] Hey, Christina, do you want to do the intro this week?
[00:00:03] Christina: [00:00:03] I do. Okay. You’re listening to overtired with, with me, Christina Warren and him Brett Terpstra. Hey, Brett, how are you?
[00:00:11] Brett: [00:00:11] I’m good. Christina Warren ha ha. I think you get to start with the health corner this week. How, how you doing
[00:00:19] Christina: [00:00:19] Okay, so I’m fine. I can’t iterate that enough. I, I have to be very clear on this because if my mom, for some reason, listens to this podcast, mom do not listen to this podcast. This is not the podcast that you need to
[00:00:32] Brett: [00:00:32] Stop right now.
[00:00:34] Christina: [00:00:34] Right. But, but also just in general, like, I love you mom, but like, this is not the podcast for you, but in case my mom or someone listens to this podcast, I have to be very clear.
[00:00:43] I’m fine. However, I had a little bit of a weird weekend. it is okay. Um, As, as it is, most of the country, and you’re going to laugh at this right now because you’re in [00:01:00] Minnesota where, you know, it, it gets cold and snows and like that’s a normal thing and people know how to deal with it. Uh, in parts of the country, like Texas, where I’m not.
[00:01:11] And, uh, the Pacific Northwest where I am living. It’s pretty rare that we get what we would call, like, I guess, major kind of winter storm alerts or whatever. And, um, for the last three years, I guess this would be the third year. There have been some, you know, snow or ice things that have happened in Seattle.
[00:01:32] I’ve managed to avoid them because I’ve been in an Australia when it’s happened. But this year I was not in Australia because of the pandemic. So, um, it snowed in Seattle over the weekend and it snowed pretty significantly for us. Like we got, you know, I think it peaks, you know, like, Like six or seven inches, eight or nine inches in some places which, um, for Seattle is, is quite a bit right?
[00:01:56] Like this isn’t going to be, you know, like I know that like people in New [00:02:00] York and, and, you know, people like you are like ha seven inches. What, like, that’s cute. But for this part of the country, that’s actually pretty significant. And the infrastructure is not designed to deal with that. They did have plows out in a lot more areas than I was expecting, and they did have more places that were shoveled and were dealt with better than I was expecting, but it was one of those things where I woke up Saturday morning and, you know, I see.
[00:02:30] Like white all over, like the outside. And, you know, the, the building is like sending in, you know, memos that they’re not going to be in that day because they, they kind of can’t get in and places are closed. No one’s delivering food at all. And then it polices were, um, like nobody really wasn’t on Saturday.
[00:02:48] And then it pleases warlike on, on Sunday and, and Monday, it was like much more limited hours and whatnot. Well, I woke up on Saturday morning and I had a bit of a predicament. [00:03:00] Because I wear contact lenses and I was positive. Like it was positive that I still had some extra pairs of contact lenses. And I woke up and, and one of my contact lenses, I sleep in mind.
[00:03:14] You’re not supposed to, but you can. It’s, it’s fine. Whatever. But like, I, I tend to sleep in mine and I woke up and one had fallen out. And, um, the other was kind of at that point where I was just like, all right, I’ll just, I’ll just take it out and put it in a new pair. And that was when I made the realization that I don’t have any contact lenses, which is a problem. So I’m like, shit, what am I going to do? I’m like blind. And I’m like, okay, don’t panic. You’ve got to have another pair that exists somewhere. I do not. So now I really am panicking because. I don’t have a pair of glasses, um, that I have access to. If I do have them, I’m not even sure where they are, but the prescription [00:04:00] is completely so outdated that they would be almost useless.
[00:04:03] I have no contact lenses. I’m like, I can’t see, this is an actual problem. So I start to try to make an appointment someplace, um, on my phone. And then I realized. You’re not gonna be able to get anywhere because everybody is closed and places aren’t gonna be open. What are you going to do? So I did manage to find a pair that were expired and were an older prescription that I put in.
[00:04:29] That were fine for like, you know, temporary. And then I was able to get an appointment at Costco for Monday because, um, my, um, normal, um, Oh, I should back up and say this too. I go to the eye doctor every year, but my optometrist, my ophthalmologist is in Atlanta. And the last time I saw him was on the 26th of December, 2019.
[00:04:51] Obviously didn’t see him in 2020. Um, he writes me a prescription every year. The expression, uh, the prescription has expired. So I can’t [00:05:00] even like order for rush delivery, you know, like a pair, like I’m like, okay, I had to actually go get an appointment somewhere to get an eye exam. The doctor’s office at work didn’t have any appointments until March.
[00:05:11] And so I was like, fine. I’ll I’ll go to Costco, uh, and, and have them do it because they have an optometry clinic. I’ll go there. Fine. So I make an appointment for Monday, go in Monday. I have my eye appointment. Um, I opt not to be dilated, but to pay $30 and have this weird, like, uh, I scan thing, which is not supposed to be a replacement for dilation, but is in effect used for it in most cases.
[00:05:40] And it can take like a 3d picture of all the aspects of your eye. And it’s, it’s interesting. I was like, fine. I’ll do that. And so I go in and I have my exam and she writes me the script and she’s in the middle of telling me how great my eyes look. And she’s looking at the scan that she took telling me how great my eyes look.
[00:05:58] And then she [00:06:00] stops and she, the, her whole demeanor changes, she’s trying, she’s very clearly trying not to freak me out, but I can tell she’s kinda freaked out and she’s like, okay, so there’s this spot on your eye here and this a tear in your retina. And I’m like, okay. And she’s like, yeah, she’s like, this is not good.
[00:06:23] She’s like, you need to get this repaired. Like now. And she’s like in, at this point, it’s almost four o’clock in the afternoon and, and I’m, you know, part of me is thinking I’m like, okay, well I can like go, you know, tomorrow or whatever. She’s like, no, you need to, you need to go. Like now I’m going to make some calls and find a specialist.
[00:06:41] You can see you now. So. I get my prescription for my glasses and contacts. Fortunately, although I didn’t even have a chance to like, look at anything. I’d been all excited about being at Costco because I wanted to get a hot dog. And, um, I was like, very excited about this. That’s all blown out the window and she’s like, okay, there’s [00:07:00] the retinal specialists like this there’s this ophthalmologist in Renton, which is, you know, like a good, like 40 minutes away, but whatever, she’s like, you need to go there now and they can see you.
[00:07:11] So. I get an Uber. I go to rent in, I check in to see this place. They see me right away. I see the dog that I have more scans. I am dilated this time. I have like other things done again. And then they look at it and they’re like, yep, you have a tear in your retina. And don’t worry, it’s not super serious.
[00:07:31] But if this isn’t taken care of, um, the, the concern is that they need this collegiate to a T to a detached retina and that could lead to blindness. And do you have any history of family history of this stuff? And I’m like, yeah, my dad actually is now basically blind in one eye because he had something like, he kind of had like a, uh, equivalent, like a stroke in his eye or something, but he had some sort of, you know, the attachment or whatever, um, fairly recently, and it’s been [00:08:00] pretty scary.
[00:08:00] And so they’re like, yeah, well we, we need to take care of this. And, and, um, so we’re going to put lasers in your eyes and we’re going to take care of this today. I’m like, okay, this is not what I was expecting. And so then, uh, they numbed my eyeball and put lasers in my eye and repaired the tear and repair like another thing.
[00:08:20] And then I’m going to come back and have like a spot in my left eye. This was my right eye and have a spot on my, my left eye watched to see, um, what’s happening, um, scary, but like, not that big of a deal. Well, then I wake up yesterday. Tuesday. And I’m seeing some floaters, which I hadn’t had before. I, I should also say this.
[00:08:42] I was completely asymptomatic. I had no symptoms at all. No, like flashes of light, no flavor, floaters that I was seeing, like there was nothing that was exhibiting itself to me that I would have known that I had a tear in my retina. And, um, so in retrospect, [00:09:00] I’m super glad that I ran out of contact lenses and had to make an, a, an emergency appointment because.
[00:09:05] Real talk. I probably would’ve waited until it would be safe for me to travel again, to go to my ophthalmologist in Atlanta, because I’ve been seeing him since I was a kid. Uh, he did eye surgery that I had, um, uh, uh, you know, over a little over a decade ago.
[00:09:25] Brett: [00:09:25] you are weirdly loyal to your healthcare providers.
[00:09:28] Christina: [00:09:28] I am, I
[00:09:29] Brett: [00:09:29] You’ll travel across the country for them.
[00:09:32] Christina: [00:09:32] I totally will. It’s it’s a weird thing. I’m both weirdly loyal. And also it’s like one of those, like, I just don’t want to find new people things,
[00:09:39] Brett: [00:09:39] Weirdly loyal and lazy.
[00:09:41] Christina: [00:09:41] yeah. So I was going to say it’s both, but, but for things like your eyes, like if you have somebody who’s literally like, been like treating you since you were a kid
[00:09:48] Brett: [00:09:48] Oh, yeah, I have a guy. I know how
[00:09:49] Christina: [00:09:49] yeah.
[00:09:50] And like, if I’m going to see my parents anyway, like I S, like I said, I see him every year. This isn’t one of those things where I put this off. Like I see him every year. Um, and [00:10:00] so, you know, like, like, like, like grant I think was trying to kind of understand. I was like, no, I saw him like 13 months ago.
[00:10:07] Like, this is not one of those things where like this, you know, so, so this is something that’s developed recently, right? Because he clearly didn’t see any signs of it, even when he was looking at me last. Um, so, um, I woke up yesterday morning and I was starting to see some floaters and also my eye was hurting. And so I called and they said, this is normal, but you need to like be off of screens for the day. I’m like, fuck, be off of screens for the day. Like that. That is my nightmare.
[00:10:40]Brett: [00:10:40] now it’s affecting my life.
[00:10:43] Christina: [00:10:43] Right, right. Well, and at this point too, like, cause he told me that I could wear contacts and whatnot, but I hadn’t put them in cause my eye hurt. And I’m like, like the laser is not painful, but it’s not comfortable either. Um, and uh, you know, sadly you don’t get like magic powers, but it is one of those things where like it, [00:11:00] yeah.
[00:11:00] It’s not a super comfortable thing. Um, but, but it’s not like super painful, but it’s also, yeah, it’s not super comfortable to like have, you know, Something hot and sharp and whatever, like on your eyeball, it’s just not. Uh, and so, um, they were like, all right, stay off screens for the day. And if it, if it doesn’t, if it persists or whatever, then they can come in.
[00:11:21] But, but, but take it off. So. Um, on Tuesday, I basically had to, like, I was very, very, very limited, like on any screens, I was listening to a lot of podcasts because I’m now in a position where I have I’m very near-sighted and this is why my retina, I think, like I had the tear, it’s more common in people who are near-sighted.
[00:11:40] Um, like it’s, it’s not something I did it wasn’t, I didn’t have any sort of trauma or whatever. It was just one of those, like, things that just happen. But, um, Like I’m in this position where I can’t see anything more than, I don’t know, five inches in front of my face. Uh, and I [00:12:00] can’t look at screens and I’m just like, this sucks.
[00:12:05] So I was like, I guess I can listen to podcasts and. Taylor Swift music, uh, you know, but it was like one of those things, like it’s, and it’s even one of those things like it, you know, it’s hard to like walk around even like, when you’re like this blind, this is why I was freaking out on Saturday. When I woke up, I was like, Holy shit.
[00:12:21] Like I’m, this is like an unsafe situation. I mean, I’m kind of, I guess, in retrospect, again, like happy that we’re in a situation where, you know, we’re not expected to go into work because I don’t know how I would get into an office or something. You know, um, with, with being able to see the way that I am.
[00:12:40] So now, now we’re like two days later and my eye is still a little sore, but it’s fine. But the floaters seem to have gone away. So
[00:12:50] Brett: [00:12:50] But you
[00:12:50] Christina: [00:12:50] I’m fine.
[00:12:51] Brett: [00:12:51] now.
[00:12:52] Christina: [00:12:52] But yeah, I can look at screens now I’m going to try to be like more limited and like, not be on them, like for [00:13:00] 16 or 17 hours a day. But yeah,
[00:13:03] Brett: [00:13:03] Does your prescription change much?
[00:13:05] Christina: [00:13:05] Not really. Um, and in fact like it, so when I saw him a year ago, he wrote me two prescriptions for my contacts and he was like, here’s a higher one and a lower one, and you can have them both billed.
[00:13:18] But if you feel like you need the higher one, get it filled. And I didn’t, I just had the lower one filled. And then she said the same thing. She was going to give me the higher one. But when she kind of showed both, she was like, well, no, if you can make, do with the lower one, which is still. You know, moderate, uh, Lehigh.
[00:13:33] She was like, then, then do that. Um, don’t, don’t go up. So it doesn’t change very often. Like it has changed over time obviously, but, but you know, it’s every, every two years or so, I would say that I probably go up.
[00:13:48] Brett: [00:13:48] huh? My, I got my first pair of glasses when I was 12 and it like, I, I had been near-sighted for years and didn’t realize that like trees had individual leaves and things like that. [00:14:00] Um, so I got my glasses. I think I was around 12 and my prescription has not changed since. I I’m required to get an eye exam.
[00:14:10] Uh, my, uh, my next layer every two years. And in order to keep getting contacts, I have to get an eye exam, but it’s pointless because my prescription never changes.
[00:14:23] Christina: [00:14:23] what’s your prescription.
[00:14:24] Brett: [00:14:24] Fuck. If I know, why would I know that
[00:14:27] Christina: [00:14:27] I don’t know.
[00:14:28] Brett: [00:14:28] it’s like negative 1.5, but I have no idea. 1.5. What. And my, my left eye is worse than my right eye
[00:14:37] Christina: [00:14:37] That’s no, I mean that’s low. Yeah. My mine is, mine is negative six. Um, which, uh, is not great, but it’s also not like terrible. Like there’s some people who are like negative 12, which was like, for people who have that, like they need, they have to wear hard contact lenses because
[00:14:55] Brett: [00:14:55] or
[00:14:56] Christina: [00:14:56] have to be so thick. Yeah. But like, [00:15:00] So I think we’ve talked about this before. So, so you got glasses when you were 12. Did you get contacts then too? Or how old were you when you got contacts?
[00:15:08] Brett: [00:15:08] remember. I think I didn’t get context until high school.
[00:15:11] Christina: [00:15:11] Okay. Um, yeah, so I got contacts when I was eight. Um, I bet. Yeah. So I basically had glasses for like two days, maybe. So, uh, it started when, like I was in first grade and I found out I had to go, it was needing to sit in the front of the room to be able to see things. And then my vision was, was slowly showing that it was worse.
[00:15:32] And so I went to the doctor and you have to think that in like 1991, um, glasses for kids, well, they still suck, frankly. They still suck, but they really sucked then, like you had very limited number of frames. And they were ugly and I hated how they looked and I cried and I was like, I don’t want to wear these.
[00:15:52] And like, I cried on the way home. I think I wore them all twice for probably 45 minutes. And I was just like, asked my mom was like, [00:16:00] why can’t I just get contact lenses? And she was like, well, I’m not sure she asked the doctor. And he put somebody who I think was as young as maybe nine or 10 in them never, never anybody eight.
[00:16:12] And he was like, well, If she’s responsible enough, if she can, you know, do it in the office, then we’ll, we’ll let her have them. And I was able to do it and it took me, you know, it used to take me a long time to put them in and now I made it, I don’t even need it. I haven’t needed a mirror in years. You know, it was one of those things when like the, um, um, optometrist who was super sweet, um, at the, the Costco clinic, she was asking me, she was like, is there any reason why you sleep in your contacts?
[00:16:40] And I was like, I’ve been wearing contacts for 30 years. I bad habits. She’s like, no, it’s fine. You, you change the more frequently if you do that. But you know, like, because these are rated a certain way or whatever, but she was like, it’s fine. I was like, yeah. I was like, I should probably, you know, take better care of things or whatever, but, you know, I never had any issues.
[00:16:59] And, [00:17:00] and for the record, The terror. My retina had nothing to do with, with my like regime of my contact lenses. Um, because I did ask about that. I was like, did I do anything for this? She was like, no, she was like, you could get like an eye ulcer or some other stuff, which I did have once. And, and that was enough for me to be like, no, I’ll take better care of like my, my, my contact lens health.
[00:17:21] But at this point, like I’ve been wearing them for, you know, like so much of my life that, um, I should get LASIK now that I’ve had like one laser in my eye now I’m kind of like, well, fuck it. I should just get the, get the whole thing done. Um,
[00:17:39]Brett: [00:17:39] we have dedicated 20 minutes of our show to iHealth. We should be sponsored by, uh, maybe, uh, what’s that ma uh, pouch and loam
[00:17:52] Christina: [00:17:52] yeah. Yeah. Bausch and Lomb. Them or, or, um, uh, who is it? Uh, uh, Oasis is, is, uh, [00:18:00] is, is the brand name of whoever I do it, but yeah, Bausch and Lomb or somebody else should definitely sponsor us.
[00:18:05] Brett: [00:18:05] week’s episode brought to you by two people who sleep in their contact. I sleep in mind for. Uh, generally a month at a time. And then I’ll take them out and let them soak for a day or two and I’ll wear glasses. And then I’ll put the same pair back in for another month. And I changed my contacts like every two months.
[00:18:25] And I’m honest with this, about this with my doctor and, and he basically is like, your eyes look fine. Your, your eyes are in great shape. I really, I don’t endorse the way you treat them, but you it’s not causing you any problems. So carry on.
[00:18:42] Christina: [00:18:42] Right. Yeah, exactly. This has been my scenario as well. So, uh, but again, anyone listening, we’re not doctors we’ve made that pretty clear. Uh,
[00:18:51]Brett: [00:18:51] Yes. Yes, we have
[00:18:54]Christina: [00:18:54] but, uh, but who are we really sponsored by this week?
[00:18:57] Brett: [00:18:57] Oh, well, uh, let’s [00:19:00] start with, uh, with some, some cat litter. Um, so I, this morning was yoga. Uh, at home, of course, uh, and, uh, The kitten bod. Uh, she, she was having a very wild morning, like tearing around the house, jumping up on things, attacking toes and just going nuts. And she had started to calm down by the time yoga started and like all through, like we, uh, enforced yoga.
[00:19:31] You do a lot of AB work. Um, so all through abs while I’m on my back, she’s sitting on my chest, just watching me. And then we went straight into bridge and she fell asleep. She’s just like sleeping on my chest all the way through bridge. It was pretty hilarious. Um, but anyway,
[00:19:52] Christina: [00:19:52] is awesome.
[00:19:53] Brett: [00:19:53] she really is so, Oh, w while we’re talking about CA so Valentine’s day [00:20:00] would have been Finnegan’s birthday.
[00:20:03] So that was kind of, uh, uh,
[00:20:05] Christina: [00:20:05] A hard one.
[00:20:06] Brett: [00:20:06] Yeah, it was, it was rough for us, but I, I, it made me fully cognizant that bod has, has brought me joy in a, in a place that would have been really sad. So, uh, rest in peace Finnegan. Uh, we also got bod spade the day before Valentine’s day. So she was groggy and I was seriously concerned.
[00:20:36] That something horrible was going to happen, but it didn’t end. And this morning was proof that she survived. Anyway. One of the great things about cats is that you don’t have to let them out. In the fucking gold or take them for walks in the cold.
[00:20:55] Christina: [00:20:55] cold, right.
[00:20:56] Brett: [00:20:56] But the downside of that is that they poop inside your [00:21:00] house and, uh, and they don’t know how to use a toilet.
[00:21:02] So you end up cleaning a litter box. So. Question for you. What if there was a way to have an odor-free litter box? It was easy to clean and automatically replaced every month. And what if it was leak-proof and made from entirely recycled material and itself was recyclable as well. That’s what kitty poo club does.
[00:21:23] Kitty poo club is an all-in-one litter box solution designed to be convenient for you. Every month, kitty poo club delivers an affordable high quality recyclable litter box. That’s prefilled with the litter of your choice. And as I’ve mentioned before, I chose the soy-based litter because hippies and, uh, it has been like I’ve had the same litter out for a full month.
[00:21:50] And it does not smell at all, like at all. So I am really impressed with this particular litter. I haven’t tried the [00:22:00] nontoxic still look a litter, but if it’s anything like this, soy-based litter, it there, their promise of an odor free litter box is valid. Um, and bod, who we were just talking about. She loves it too.
[00:22:15] We you’re supposed to have one more litter box, then you have number of cats. So we have
[00:22:22] Christina: [00:22:22] So, so you’re supposed to have three.
[00:22:23] Brett: [00:22:23] So we have three litter boxes. Only one of them right now is a kitty poo club box. Bod almost always picks the kitty poo club litter. She loves it. Um, I don’t. Yeti Yeti, maybe it’s a territory thing, but Yeti, Yeti likes the one that we have a smallish house.
[00:22:46] And so with three litter boxes, one of them almost has to be in my bedroom and. I didn’t get the kitty poo club box in my bedroom. Elle got that one in [00:23:00] her bedroom. Um, because we have separate bedrooms because you have, it is so nice. I never had that when I was married, we always shared a bed and it turns out I really don’t like sleeping with other people.
[00:23:12] So anyway, side tangent, but.
[00:23:15] Christina: [00:23:15] That is the dream to be totally honest. I have a bedroom. I’m a huge fan of
[00:23:19] Brett: [00:23:19] It is so nice here. It is so nice. The side side, side, tangent, Bob tends to sleep with me and she curls up in the crook of my knee. And one of the beauties of sleeping in your own bed is you can fart, like it’s okay to fart. Bod, however, hates farts. She bites my butt. If I fart like threw the blanket, she will bite me.
[00:23:47] It’s it’s pretty hilarious. And then I crack up, but anyway, these boxes are leak-proof eco-friendly and have a fun design for every season. When the month is up, you just recycled the box in kitty poo [00:24:00] club automatically delivers a brand new one, a no changing use litter, and you might even be able to get away without cleaning the litter at all.
[00:24:08] You can cut. The reason that we do clean our litter is because the dog eats the poop and we don’t want the dog eating the poop. So other than that, honestly, it, it, I, if you don’t have a dog that eats poop yeah. You can get away without cleaning your litter at all. Uh, and you can customize your order based on how many cats you have and what type of litter they prefer.
[00:24:31] And kitty poo club has a no risk guarantee. So you can easily customize or cancel anytime. Right now, kitty poo club is offering you our loyal listeners 20% off your first order when you set up auto-ship by going to kitty poo club.com and entering promo code over tired. So if you love your cat, but you hate the litter.
[00:24:53] That’s kitty poo club.com and promo code overtired. I just made like a five minute [00:25:00] read out of that too.
[00:25:01] Christina: [00:25:01] That’s
[00:25:02] Brett: [00:25:02] we’re moving slowly today. We’re already halfway through the show and we haven’t even talked about Taylor Swift’s new album yet.
[00:25:11] Christina: [00:25:11] I know. Which is important.
[00:25:14] Brett: [00:25:14] I mean, w this is above all else. A Taylor Swift podcast,
[00:25:19] Christina: [00:25:19] It is a Taylor Swift podcast. So.
[00:25:21] Brett: [00:25:21] a Brittany Spears podcast, apparently, but
[00:25:24] Christina: [00:25:24] Yes. Yes, yes. A follow up on that. Uh, Elle sent me a really nice DM this morning that I haven’t had a chance to respond to, but I will because of the eye thing, um, because she had thoughts about it, which were really thoughtful that I’m going to respond to.
[00:25:37] Brett: [00:25:37] I told you
[00:25:38] Christina: [00:25:38] thank you, L definitely is.
[00:25:41] So thank you Al for that, because I appreciate it. Like.
[00:25:46] Brett: [00:25:46] She told me she’s like, I like Christina. It doesn’t have to make good on her. Like, uh, talking about like having an in-depth conversation. With me, but, but she does have thoughts.
[00:25:58] Christina: [00:25:58] I love that. And I’m [00:26:00] very appreciative of that to be totally honest, because I’ve been thinking a lot about it. So Taylor Swift is rerecording all of her old news.
[00:26:09]Brett: [00:26:09] W I thought w I thought Ryan Adams already did that for her.
[00:26:14] Christina: [00:26:14] bump, bump?
[00:26:15]Brett: [00:26:15] Okay. So, so again, this is like second time around.
[00:26:19] Christina: [00:26:19] Yes. Speaking of problematic faves, um,
[00:26:23] Brett: [00:26:23] tell me what I don’t. I don’t know about this.
[00:26:26] Christina: [00:26:26] Oh, Oh you, Oh, he got canceled hard.
[00:26:29] Brett: [00:26:29] Oh, wow.
[00:26:30] Christina: [00:26:30] Uh, so he, um, so, you know, uh, uh, Phoebe Bridgers,
[00:26:36] Brett: [00:26:36] No.
[00:26:37] Christina: [00:26:37] she’s great. She’s you would like her she’s really good. She came forward that he likes, started grooming her when she was like, Really young and like taking advantage of her and like basically kind of like held albums and stuff.
[00:26:49] She was working on hostage and other women came forward about abusive behavior. Mandy Moore, his ex wife came forward and was like, yeah, he was like an emotionally [00:27:00] abusive, like asshole when we were married that also like held some of her albums and art stuff, hostage, like some. Underage girl. It’s, it’s unclear if he knew she was underage or not, like came forward about like their relationship and, and, um, sexting stuff and whatnot.
[00:27:22] Um, yeah. Yeah. He got canceled. Hardcore.
[00:27:26] Brett: [00:27:26] I totally missed that.
[00:27:28] Christina: [00:27:28] Yeah. So, um, It’s a problem. I mean, it’s terrible. Like what he did, obviously. And then he like released some like pseudo apology thing. And then he, it happened right before he was supposed to release like two albums in a year. And those were obviously shelved, although he has his own record label.
[00:27:46] So, you know, he can do his own kind of thing, but you know, his, his touring and all that stuff was out. And then he did actually release. The the album and he was just kind of, it was, it was written beforehand and he [00:28:00] released, you know, an apology, but it’s not clear if that’s going to be enough or not. I don’t know.
[00:28:06] It’s um, he’s always been one of my favorite artists, so
[00:28:10] Brett: [00:28:10] like the kind of thing you can apologize away. That sounds like the kind of thing that I, 100% thinks someone should, should be canceled for.
[00:28:18] Christina: [00:28:18] Yeah, no, I agree in the difficult thing then becomes like, it’s the whole, like, you know, like art versus artists thing. And, and I, I can’t pretend like I don’t still enjoy and have like good emotional memories of his past work, but it is also one of those things where I’m like, yeah, I’m not going to listen to his new stuff, you know?
[00:28:36] And even the past stuff is, unfortunately now tanged with this. With this weird-ass, which is unfortunate, but like, I, you know, obviously don’t condone or support anything that he did, but God it’s really unfortunate. Um, uh, mostly for the, for the women who had to suffer, like yeah.
[00:28:54] Brett: [00:28:54] yeah, I just thought of a perfect segue to our second sponsor. I’m going to hold onto [00:29:00] it because
[00:29:01] Christina: [00:29:01] Wash to wash it
[00:29:02] Brett: [00:29:02] Yes. Oh my God. Yes. But anyway, we’ll get back to that. So Taylor is, is rerecording old stuff because she already put out two albums this year
[00:29:12] Christina: [00:29:12] Right,
[00:29:13] Brett: [00:29:13] you know what? Let’s let’s keep going and just start from the beginning and do it all again.
[00:29:20] Christina: [00:29:20] exactly. It’s that? And um, so her masters have now been sold twice. I think we talked about this before. So she was with a record label called big machine records. That that was, I think she was the first artist they signed that she signed with when she was 15 years old. And she was with them for her first six albums.
[00:29:41] So, uh, or self-titled fearless speak now read 1989 reputation and, uh, And yes, I did just like rattle that off the top of my head without even having to think about it, which is really sad. Um, and so, [00:30:00] um, this is true. So she, uh, those first six albums were with that label and she’d wanted to own her own masters.
[00:30:08] And, and by owning that, like, she’s the song writer on all of her songs. Uh, sometimes she’s the soul song, right. But she’s at least like one of them, like on all of them. And so she owns her publishing, meaning that she. Gets control over who can license the song. And she gets paid every time, like a fee every time, you know, as long as played or covered or whatever, um, as a songwriter, but the mechanical recording of like the song itself, the master recording, the music video, uh, the album art, like all that stuff belongs to belong to the label, which is fairly common.
[00:30:42] She wanted to own her masters and she claims that she was never given an opportunity to own her masters. Um, instead what she was given was kind of an idea, which was okay if you re up and reassign another deal with us, because after her initial deal had expired for each new album, you give [00:31:00] us, we’ll give you the masters back on an old album.
[00:31:05] Um, and. And she was like, but, but, but I don’t want that. I just want to buy them outright. And, and the, the, the CEO, the owner of the record label, he wanted to sell the record label and she knew that was going to happen. Why she didn’t buy the record label outright. I’m not sure she claimed she was not ever given the opportunity to buy her masters outright.
[00:31:24] There’s dispute about that. But he then sold the record label to someone and not just anyone, but someone who Taylor has beef with someone who tailored very much dislikes. And this obviously may Taylor very, very, very upset. So Taylor came forward with a statement. Uh, this was like in, in, in 2019, when, when this was revealed that, you know, how, how, like, you know, like destroyed, she felt by it, how upset she was by it and, and really started advocating for artists rights.
[00:31:55] And then was basically kind of like, okay. And starting, you know, next year I [00:32:00] can rerecord. All of my music because, um, you know, you have to like the clause in, in, in her contract basically said, uh, you know, you can rerecord after if it’s been, you know, at least five years or whatever. So for her first five albums, she was like, I, you know, enough time over the past that I, that I can rerecord, you know?
[00:32:21] Um, but my first five albums or whatever, and I, and I’m going to do that because I don’t want this, this guy, scooter Braun to get money. And own my work. He’s still gonna own the masters, know my music, videos and things that are really personal to me, but I don’t want them profiting off of this. Well, that kicked off a back and forth and people were, you know, people on both sides were, were, were saying stuff.
[00:32:43] And then over the summer, Um, right before she released folklore, it came out that scooter Braun sold her masters. So not the whole label, but her masters to Shamrock holdings, which is like, uh, [00:33:00] uh, um, Private equity firm for $335 million, which was like the same amount that he paid for the entire record label.
[00:33:08] So he he’d gotten funders cause he doesn’t have that kind of cash to buy the record label for over $300 billion. And then he sold just her masters for more than that, um, to this the Shamrock whole lanes. And at first she was like, I talked to the Shamrock. They were really supportive. I liked working with them, but he still going to get a cut up some stuff for as period of time.
[00:33:29] And I don’t want him getting anything from anything that I do. So I’m still gonna go forward and rerecord everything. So she announced last week as kind of surprise the, the first. Uh, the release date for her first, like kind of fully rerecorded album, which is her second album fearless that she won album of the year for and a re-released, um, version of love story Taylor’s version, which was her first international number one.
[00:33:58] And, uh, [00:34:00] it’s good.
[00:34:02] Brett: [00:34:02] all right.
[00:34:02] Christina: [00:34:02] good.
[00:34:03] Brett: [00:34:03] All right.
[00:34:05] Christina: [00:34:05] Um,
[00:34:05] Brett: [00:34:05] I, Frank Frank, our friend grumpy, Frank, he, uh, he, he, he DMD me to let me know there was, uh, there was new stuff that I, I should, I should check out. And I didn’t because I, I got other stuff to do. Um, but, uh, but yeah, I didn’t realize what it was at all until just now that, that, that was what was going on.
[00:34:31] That’s that’s interesting. Yeah,
[00:34:33] Christina: [00:34:33] Yeah. And, and, um, the, the way that she’s doing it, I mean, obviously she wants them to sound as close to the originals as possible because, um, that’s the whole point, right? Cause it’s really, the whole point of this is I think to is to, to lessen the value of the originals, which will always have value.
[00:34:50] I think that her goal would be long-term would be okay. Make this so that she can sell the sync rights, which would be like, meaning like the. The, the rights to be [00:35:00] used in, in, in TV or movies or whatever, um, uh, for these new ones. Cause she’ll, she’ll approve that she won’t approve the old version. She’ll approve the new ones.
[00:35:08] Um, make it valuable enough for the new ones. De-value the originals to the point where maybe Shamrock will be willing to sell them to her for. I don’t know, a hundred million dollars in a few years or whatever, right? Like that they’ll, they won’t see it as an appreciating asset, but as, as depreciating because she is doing this other stuff.
[00:35:26] Um, so it sounds really similar, but also her voices has gotten a lot better. So you, it sounds. It’s actually interesting to listen to the two side by side, because the instrumentation is richer, although it’s, you know, similar, um, she got many of the same people who, who were on the original to record with her on the new one.
[00:35:48] Um, but her voice sounds better. And, uh, it’s just like a more full sound. Um, it’s really interesting it’s to, to listen to it, how it like sounds exactly like the old song, but also different. [00:36:00] Uh, it it’s it’s, it’s good. I’m super, super excited to hear the rest of her catalog as that comes out and what she’s going to do when she releases.
[00:36:10] Fearless it’ll be out in April 9th, um, is that she has, uh, six additional songs that were from her vault that she’d never recorded before. Exactly, exactly. And so, um, the, the, the music video, or I guess I should say like lyric video, she did was actually really sweet because like love stories, like probably.
[00:36:31] Like it, it was her first really, really big head. And, and it’s, it’s the one that like, she always performs and has updated a couple of times make more like a more modern twist, like for 1989, like she made like kind of a synth pop kind of variant of it and whatnot. And, um, she didn’t do that for this rerecording.
[00:36:48] Like she very much kept like the banjo and like the, the, the, um, uh, You know, um, slide, um, a guitar and stuff like that, uh, in it, but, uh, the fiddles [00:37:00] and violins and whatnot. But, um, she, um, made a lyric video that because it’s one of her most iconic music videos, and one of the sad things about this, I’m going to have to imagine it makes her like, feel.
[00:37:13] Violated is that, you know, okay. So you’re like 18 years old or whatever. When, when this album comes out, when you start to work on this stuff for it, you’re your first, her first album is like, they are in essence kind of like her photo albums and like her, her memories. Right. And all of that belongs to somebody else.
[00:37:32] So. That has to be kind of shitty to be like, okay, all this stuff. That was my work. That was my art or whatever, belongs to someone else. I don’t have any ownership of it. And beyond that, like, because my songs are my diaries, this does feel like my life, which is now, you know, under someone else’s control.
[00:37:49] So the lyric video, I know I’m a PSAP and I’m a huge Taylor Swift, Stan. We all know this, but I did actually kind of like tear up because it’s all photos of her. With [00:38:00] fans, like from the very early part of her career, which was, was really sweet. So she was like, kind of saying like, the love story, you know, is, is her and her fans, which is really sweet.
[00:38:12] Um, and I thought it was a nice way for them to. Address the music video thing. Cause it’s like, how do you can’t recreate that music video? It’s one of those iconic things where, you know, she like, you know, was in this, you know, corset and did this, like this kid’s thing. And like, you know, meets this dreamy looking guy and in the, um, you know, woods or whatever.
[00:38:33] And. You know, it’s, it’s, it’s this very romantic fairy tale, like, like an 18 year olds idea of romance sort of thing, right? Like it’s, it’s like not a realistic thing, but it’s, you know, very much like a, of that era. Like you can’t recreate that. You wouldn’t want to recreate that, but to have, you know, the, the photographs and like some video footage of home movies and stuff, you know, of, of her from that era was really sweet to see.
[00:38:57] Um, and, uh, [00:39:00] What’s also great for her because she’s freaking genius is that she gets to resell this now. So people like me are going to buy an album that they bought 12 years ago. Like multiple copies of, cause she’s releasing it on vinyl, on gold vinyl, which obviously I’m getting, and then I went ahead and I’m going to get like the CD or the iTunes or whatever.
[00:39:23] And you know, also, you know, they can rerelease the songs to radio. They can put it on Spotify playlist, like. She gets to double dip the same way, you know, artists like do like remastered box sets or whatever, except this, this feels better than that because it’s like, Oh no, these are rerecorded and it’s for a purpose.
[00:39:42] Right? So like that the fans like me are like, Oh no, but see, we need to buy this. And we don’t feel taken advantage of the way you sometimes do when like an artist, we release the box set of stuff. Cause you’re like, Oh no, see, cause this is now really Taylor’s now she gets a hundred percent of the money instead of just 70%.
[00:39:59] Brett: [00:39:59] it’s like [00:40:00] when you take an application and you rewrite it with modern underpinnings and then add a couple of new features and then you can sell it all over again with an upgrade price.
[00:40:11] Christina: [00:40:11] Yes or
[00:40:12] Brett: [00:40:12] I made this make sense to me.
[00:40:14] Christina: [00:40:14] you did. You did anyway. So that’s the Taylor Swift news. I, I encourage you to listen to the new version at some point it’s actually, I would be interested in your perspective, like. And love story is not going to be one of your favorite songs when 1989 is redone. Like, that’ll be the interesting one.
[00:40:30] I, cause I would love to like, hear like how she’s able to compare that. But I would like from you from like somebody who’s a musician, like for you to like listen to the two versions side by side, I’d be interested in your like analytical take from that because I do actually think that’s interesting now too, to be able to, like, I was listening to the two versions side by side and I was like, this is actually really interesting to.
[00:40:51] Here, the subtle differences in instrumentation, as well as just how our voice has changed and improved.
[00:40:58] Brett: [00:40:58] all right. Aye. Aye. [00:41:00] Aye. Solomnly swear that I will, I will do that. And I will offer thoughtful, thoughtful analysis as a, uh, an appreciator, but not a fan. Uh, someone who can look at it without any emotional
[00:41:17] Christina: [00:41:17] I was going to say, I was going to say no, that this is why I’m asking you, because like, I think that would be like good. Cause I can’t pretend that I, I am like, not a fan. Like I can try to be objective, but I’m not objective. So I would be interested in, in your perspective, uh, before we go into our next sponsor read, I just want to know from you, what artists of yours would you like to hear them?
[00:41:38] Like maybe you rerecord their catalog, like, you know, with the, with avid of time, you know, like maybe with like their. Uh, more, you know, like if their voice has gotten better or their, or their skills have gotten better, is there an artist that you would like to hear them rerecord or, or reattempt a classic album?
[00:41:55] Brett: [00:41:55] Is it okay. If it would be impossible to do
[00:41:58] Christina: [00:41:58] Yeah, of course.
[00:41:59] Brett: [00:41:59] Elliot [00:42:00] Smith,
[00:42:00] Christina: [00:42:00] Yeah. Yeah.
[00:42:03] Brett: [00:42:03] like most of, most of them music I liked that is old enough to be worth rerecording. I wouldn’t want them to, because I love the classic sound and there’s a, you know, I pull up these old albums because I want to hear the way they used to
[00:42:18] Christina: [00:42:18] Yes, totally.
[00:42:20] Brett: [00:42:20] Elliot Smith though, his music was so brilliant and his evolution was just beginning
[00:42:27] Christina: [00:42:27] It
[00:42:27] Brett: [00:42:27] and, and, you know, whatever the circumstances around his death, it seems a little murky, but,
[00:42:35] Christina: [00:42:35] does. It does. But regardless.
[00:42:37] Brett: [00:42:37] yeah, like it, it, I would be very curious to see if he rerecorded some of his best music now, what that would be like.
[00:42:47] Speaking of dead musicians. Um, I, so I was talking with my friend, Jeff Severns Gunzel the other day, actually yesterday. And, and we were talking about throwing away old [00:43:00] records and like, I basically my entire vinyl collection I let go of except for two records, uh, two seven inch records, one of my band and one of a band called man frayed.
[00:43:13] That I just loved. And the lead singer had committed suicide, uh, while I was still living in Minneapolis and it was a sad story and I still listen to this album with like a tinge of, of melancholy and. And sadness, but turned out. I mentioned it to Jeff and he was like the lead singer of that band actually introduced two of the most important people in my life.
[00:43:43] Uh, and like this, this band, the members of this band had been pivotal to his life and his career. And it was this weird. Weird correlation, I guess, like we both lived in Minneapolis [00:44:00] around the same time. And uh, yeah. Anyway, let’s get back to female musicians. Cause I have something to say, but first say Ryan Adam’s name,
[00:44:11] Christina: [00:44:11] Ryan
[00:44:12] Brett: [00:44:12] speaking of Ryan Adams and things you need to wash off
[00:44:15] Christina: [00:44:15] Yes.
[00:44:16] Brett: [00:44:16] or, or alternative segue, you know what the best way to shake it off is.
[00:44:22] Christina: [00:44:22] Put the shower
[00:44:23] Brett: [00:44:23] Yes. Um, so w this week’s episode is also sponsored by Nebia, by Mowen, and they make this shower that it uses 45% less water than even a low-flow shower heads, but provides twice the coverage. And they were kind enough to send both Christina and I, a shower heads. And, uh, I installed mine. I used to be a plumber.
[00:44:54] Okay. I was a plumber’s apprentice, but the installation was super easy for me. But I’m [00:45:00] curious, you, Christina, did you find it pretty simple to install?
[00:45:05] Christina: [00:45:05] Yes, and I should be very clear. I am not a plumber. I am not good with tools. I am not somebody who like likes that sort of thing. Um, you know, grant has tools. Uh, but, uh, I, I tried to do it as much myself as I could. And, um, honestly it was, it was remarkably easy to install.
[00:45:25] Brett: [00:45:25] And, uh, as, uh, so the cool thing about it for me is that the it’s it’s on this like twenty-five inch, uh, up and down arm. And you can just slide the head up and down and tilt it. Up and down like angled ahead. So you can get it exactly where you wanted it, any point in your shower. And I love that, but I’m curious as a woman with hair, does that, is that like, is that convenient for you?
[00:45:56] Christina: [00:45:56] Yeah, no, it was really, it’s really nice because sometimes you [00:46:00] do want it to be a little bit higher or lower. It also has a wand, which is really great for like shaving your legs or your arms, or, or, you know, like other parts of your body, which like, it makes it really convenient. But being able to like, you know, adjust the head so that as you said, yeah, because I have a lot of hair and I haven’t had a haircut in a year and I need to get a haircut desperately, but my hair is now like, Incredibly long.
[00:46:21] And so, um, being able to kind of adjust the flow, you know, so that I, it both feels good. Um, and, and is also able to like wash, you know, I have like, uh, uh, enough of a flow to, you know, like get enough suds and stuff in my hair so that I’m not like, you know, gonna try, no, I’m not starting to see if that can make a gorilla glue girl, uh, the girlfriends and I can’t can’t do it.
[00:46:46] Brett: [00:46:46] it seems to me like getting the suds in is the easy part, rinsing them out would be the part I would be concerned about.
[00:46:53] Christina: [00:46:53] That’s the thing, right? Like you want to be able to like you yeah, exactly. Like you want to be able to like wash it out and like, you want to be able to have that angle, but it’s [00:47:00] great because it’s this, it’s this, um, you know, like, um, like rain shower kind of, um, uh, like motif, which uses less water, but is incredibly, incredibly comfortable.
[00:47:11] It’s one of those things. Like, I love how it feels. It’s, um, a huge upgrade from the shower head that I, you know, I had that came with my apartment. And, um, in grant shower, we don’t have two bedrooms. We have two bathrooms. He has like, he has the upgraded. Uh, he like a number of years ago we bought like a better shower head.
[00:47:33] And like, he has that one and I was like, all right, fine. You can have that one. I’m getting this one. He’s very jealous. And I’m like, Nope, this is my bathroom. You have your own bike. You don’t get this
[00:47:44] Brett: [00:47:44] Like I’m super picky about shower heads. And the shower head that I replaced was I really liked it. Like I had very intentionally picked it out and installed it, and it wa it had like eight different settings and, and a wand and everything. [00:48:00] And I was a little concerned that I wouldn’t like this one as much, but it turns out and I say this despite being paid.
[00:48:09]It’s better. I like it. And, and L likes it too. Uh, that, that’s always the other concern. When I upgrade things in our houses, will I just make it worse for someone else? And L L loves it and it’s been, it’s been good all around. Um, tip I installed the wand at waist level. So it like has this magnetic kind of ball that attaches to the shower wall and then it pivot and you can like rotate it all around on that ball at the point in any direction.
[00:48:42] So I found like at waist level, it gives me like extra, uh, like the shower diffuses. That’s how it saves water. So by the time it gets down to about your knees, it’s a little more, uh, diffused. Then it [00:49:00] is up around your shoulders. So putting the wand halfway down makes it a perfect full body shower. Um, I shouldn’t mention.
[00:49:08] This shower head was designed by former Tesla, NASA and Apple engineers who spent years researching and developing a superior shower experience. And D the superior shower experience is, is true, but the fact that it saves like half of your water bill, you can take showers twice as long, or take this same shower for half as much money.
[00:49:34] And that’s, that’s kind of amazing.
[00:49:36] Christina: [00:49:36] also like using less water is an important thing.
[00:49:40] Brett: [00:49:40] Sure. Like from an ecological standpoint.
[00:49:43]Christina: [00:49:43] Yeah.
[00:49:44] Brett: [00:49:44] Yes. For sure. Like, I have well water, which I love, like it is, I did a water test on our water just to see if there were any like contaminants or, or, uh, high alkaline or anything like that. And we have perfect [00:50:00] water, like perfect water. I love it. Um, so we don’t also have a water bill.
[00:50:05] But we pay an electrical bill to run the pump.
[00:50:09] Christina: [00:50:09] right.
[00:50:09] Brett: [00:50:09] we’re seeing savings on the electrical bill, which is cool.
[00:50:15] Christina: [00:50:15] Yeah. Yeah. So our water, like, because I’m in an apartment and I’m not sure like how it’s allocated, because like we have like a water bill, but it’s, it’s, it’s like, you know, I think that is allocated fairly evenly across the units. I’m not really quite sure if it’s a usage thing or not. So, and I haven’t had a Cinsault long enough to know like what the impact on you, my bills would be on, but as you said, yeah, you can have a, twice as long shower or like, you know, if you.
[00:50:43] Don’t want to, cause you use a lot of water, you know, when, when taking a shower and if you are thinking about it from a cultural perspective, I like that a lot, but I just honestly, like I’m going to be real, even aside from like the saving and water thing, I just, I find it a really nice experience. [00:51:00] Like they call it spa-like and I kind of rolled back.
[00:51:02] I was like, yeah, sure. And I was like, Oh no, this actually is very much a spa-like experience. Like it very much reminds me of, you know, when you go to. I got a spa and have, you know, uh, the shower afterwards or whatever, and, you know, or you’re at like a high-end hotel. And like, it very much reminds me of, of, um, certain hotels that I’ve stayed at where I’m like, Oh, I really like that shower.
[00:51:27] I’m like, Oh, okay. I can have this at home now. And you’re right. The, the, um, The wand, which can be, you know, detached and you can use that for, you know, other stuff, but like it,
[00:51:40] Brett: [00:51:40] Let’s be honest. That’s what wands are for.
[00:51:44] Christina: [00:51:44] yeah, sure. Uh, I mean, honestly, uh, for, for, for, for me, it really is mostly like for shaving your legs. Um, but, uh, it does make for a nice full body experience, as you said, like it really does. Um, [00:52:00] So I like mine a lot and it took me about half an hour to install. I think they say like 18 minutes on the website.
[00:52:07] It took me about half an hour because I was wanting to be really careful cause I’ve never installed anything like this ever, but, uh, I could have done it faster and I was actually impressed. Like if, if I can do this, you can. And I’m one of those people who like it can put together a computer. But like wrenches, you know what I mean?
[00:52:26] Like that’s the
[00:52:27] Brett: [00:52:27] Yeah,
[00:52:27] Christina: [00:52:27] I’m like, like freaks me out. I’m like, I I’m, like, I don’t even know what to do. I’m calling someone.
[00:52:31]Brett: [00:52:31] Oh, you want to hear the deal we got for our listeners? Uh, the Nebia by Mowen shower spot. It starts at one 99. Uh, but for overtired listeners, the first 100 people to use the code over-tired at nebia.com will get 15% off all Nebia products. Nebia rarely does deals like this. So you should jump on this, uh, Only the first hundred people go to [00:53:00] nebia.com/overtired that’s N E B I a.com/overtired and check out what they have to offer.
[00:53:07] And, uh, first a hundred people save 15%.
[00:53:11] Christina: [00:53:11] Yeah. And that’s awesome. And I have to say like, it’s, it’s really, really good shower heads. So if you’ve been looking at upgrading your shower head, uh, this is definitely one you want to check out because I’ve very, very much enjoyed it.
[00:53:23] Brett: [00:53:23] So we’ve, we’ve spent. Uh, equal amounts of time on eyes and Taylor Swift and sponsors. I feel like w w that’s like our show is in three parts basically. Um, and I actually, I think we should skip talking about tech at all this week. Well, not entirely because we do have a third sponsor that. It’s tech. So we can’t entirely skip it, but I did want to say, like, I, uh, I’ve been watching, uh, discovery of witches, uh, which has a new season out.
[00:53:57] Uh, I don’t know if you ever got into that show, but.
[00:54:00] [00:53:59] Christina: [00:53:59] No, but I, but I, I, I, what, what’s it about like, maybe I should check it out,
[00:54:04] Brett: [00:54:04] was book. Uh, it’s about, uh, it’s a love story between a witch and a vampire. And it’s that whole like fantasy genre that I typically don’t get into.
[00:54:16]Christina: [00:54:16] but you kind of love.
[00:54:18] Brett: [00:54:18] Well, no, like I will never lie like a Twilight or any of that shit, but this,
[00:54:25] Christina: [00:54:25] I was about to say, I was like, you’re a secret Twilight fan. Aren’t you
[00:54:28] Brett: [00:54:28] Um, and I never got like a, what was that one? That’s it’s not Highlander. It’s. Some Scottish time traveler, like there’s some stuff that w it was just clearly made for people with more feminine persuasions than I have.
[00:54:44] Uh, but this isn’t that I really, I, I enjoy it. Like, I’m, I’m kind of hooked on it, but anyway, at the end of one of the episodes during the credit roll, they had someone covering a Tory AEMO’s like old little earthquakes era, [00:55:00] Tori AEMO’s. And it got me back into this whole kick I made, I made a playlist that every other song alternates between K Flay and Toria AEMO’s it’s like a totally bipolar playlist.
[00:55:16] Christina: [00:55:16] No. Okay. Please have to share this because after you’d mentioned, this was like months ago now. K Flay. I have, I have listened and really enjoyed K Flay. So, and Tori Amos is one of my top five female artists of all time.
[00:55:29] Brett: [00:55:29] Yeah, I I’ve even seen her live, which
[00:55:32] Christina: [00:55:32] I have to, I’ve
[00:55:32] Brett: [00:55:32] for most. Like I’ve seen Tory MOS and I’ve seen Florence and the machine live. Um, and I don’t usually go to that kind of show. I
[00:55:42] Christina: [00:55:42] No, Tori’s insane. I’ve seen her a couple of times. She placed two pianos at
[00:55:47] Brett: [00:55:47] Yeah, she’s awesome. But like little earthquakes though is like a formative album for me. Like that was high
[00:55:54] Christina: [00:55:54] Me too. So I was in elementary school.
[00:55:57] Brett: [00:55:57] Oh, geez. Okay.
[00:56:00] [00:55:59] Christina: [00:55:59] But, but. We’ll see, this is the weird thing about our ages. Like we’re, we’re not that that many years apart, but, um, like this is like the era where, when you’re that young, like where you see like the differences or whatever. Um, but yeah, I was older when I discovered her.
[00:56:16] I like, I’d heard some of her stuff on the radio. Uh, and then, but then I was actually in high school when I discovered little earthquakes, little earthquakes, and I heard some of her, some of her later stuff at that point too. And yeah, little earthquakes is one of those, just like. Stunning stunning albums like unreal.
[00:56:34] Brett: [00:56:34] I was into, at that point in my life, I was into like the cure and nine inch nails and some like some punk rock, like, but like all of this at the same Sinead, O’Connor like all at the same time and yeah, little earthquakes. Like I realized when I, when I put this playlist together and I was listening to it, that I still knew all the words to all the songs and it [00:57:00] was, it was, it was pretty cool.
[00:57:02] It was
[00:57:02] Christina: [00:57:02] She’s unreal. Um, she has, uh, released a series of, she calls them like bootlegs or whatever from some of her tours, uh, her last tour, unfortunately, she didn’t have the bootlegs for, but, um, they’re like official recordings of the tours. But at each one of her shows, what she does is she will do covers like from audience requests.
[00:57:21] And so people write, sit down and she’ll pick something out and she’s like, Such a genuine music Virtuo so that she can cover almost any song. And it’s just incredible.
[00:57:32] Brett: [00:57:32] like there’s parts on little earthquake where she like little earthquake where she like transitions from like sad melody into like honky-tonk piano and she makes it work. And it’s kind of amazing.
[00:57:46] Christina: [00:57:46] No it is. I mean, so she was like an actual child, prodigy musician. Like she, I think she was like five or six years old. Like went to some very, very, very prestigious like music Academy. [00:58:00] And they wound up, I think, kicking her out when she was 13 or 14, because she didn’t want to play classical music. Um, but like people recognized from the time she was.
[00:58:13] You know, I guess like basically, you know, could, could play that she is one of those, like once in a, in a generational talents. Right. Uh, and, um, she was in a band and they had more kind of a punk thing. And then she did the earthquakes. It was just as her debut, uh, I guess why Tori can’t read or whatever it was technically first, but, but literal with quakes is like the one everybody knows and, um, When you think about how young she was when she wrote a lot of that and how good it is.
[00:58:44] And as you said, like the switching of genres is truly incredible. Have you ever seen the live show that she did from the, uh, well, I think it was LA mantra. I can’t, I can’t think of the name of it, but there’s like, there’s like, okay, well there’s [00:59:00] cause they’ve released the album, but like there there’s this performance that she has from like 91.
[00:59:04] I think of a per performing a lot of that stuff. Um, I’ll find it and we’ll put it in the show notes because it is well worth a watch or listen to anyone, even if you think you’re like not a Tory Amos person, if you like are a fan of just musicianship and craftsmanship is incredible to watch, um, her like work, especially like at that stage in her life.
[00:59:26] And, um, you know, she. In arguably kicked off that whole kind of like that era of like women’s like women led like singer songwriters with like the nineties, you know, that led into like the little fair thing or whatever. It was like, it was like her Anita Franco, you know, Sarah
[00:59:43] Brett: [00:59:43] like there, that was a weird time because like, this is boy band era and like female, female stars much like Brittany at the same time.
[00:59:55] Christina: [00:59:55] Well, no, this was before Brittany.
[00:59:58] Brett: [00:59:58] okay, wait. Cause these both [01:00:00] happened while I was in high school. So it wasn’t before Brittany by much.
[01:00:03] Christina: [01:00:03] Well, it wasn’t, it wasn’t like they, they had different areas. Like Tori started in like 91 and then Brittany was 99. So yeah.
[01:00:13] Brett: [01:00:13] Brittany was, while I was in college,
[01:00:15] Christina: [01:00:15] Yeah,
[01:00:17] Brett: [01:00:17] that doesn’t feel right.
[01:00:19] Christina: [01:00:19] it’s correct. Cause I was in high school.
[01:00:21] Brett: [01:00:21] Oh man. I did way too many drugs. It’s like a nine year gap right there.
[01:00:26]Christina: [01:00:26] Uh, yeah, so, um, but
[01:00:31] Brett: [01:00:31] Wait. So when was, when was in sync?
[01:00:35] Christina: [01:00:35] 98 99.
[01:00:36] Brett: [01:00:36] What, what, Oh, you just blew my mind. Like I have, uh, I I’m worried lately that my, my meds are affecting my memory, but those memories should be pretty stable. I, I hope you’re wrong. I hope you’re lying. Of
[01:00:58] Christina: [01:00:58] I’m not, no, I’m not.
[01:01:00] [01:00:59] Brett: [01:00:59] Christine. You’re never wrong about
[01:01:01] Christina: [01:01:01] No, no, no, no, no, no, but he, but I will give you, I think kind of a bit, a bit of a excuse. This is why I think you might have some confusion. Lilith fair did take off the same time. That like the boy band movement was happening. Those artists existed before that, but like the concert series and like that whole thing was also the late nineties
[01:01:24] Brett: [01:01:24] wow. Wow.
[01:01:28] Christina: [01:01:28] Lomis Morissette who was later stage that she was arguably she and Fiona Apple, arguably the end of, kind of that era, if we’re being honest, like, um, w th that was 95 for Atlanta in 96 for Fiona.
[01:01:41] Brett: [01:01:41] I, so if I had to choose between Fiona, Apple and Alanis Morissette, like now Fiona wins.
[01:01:48] Christina: [01:01:48] Is Fiona of course, but if we’re being completely real jagged, little pill is one of the greatest albums of all time.
[01:01:55] Brett: [01:01:55] Really, I didn’t like it then. And I like it less now.
[01:02:00] [01:02:00] Christina: [01:02:00] Interesting. I see that I think might be the product of time thing. Cause I was like 12 and that was like the perfect 12 year old girl, like an angst on we like everything
[01:02:10] Brett: [01:02:10] that was one of the things for me. One of the things that shaped my opinions of certain music was who was into it. And I certainly wasn’t going to be into music that 12 year old girls liked.
[01:02:22] Christina: [01:02:22] 100%, 100%. I
[01:02:24] Brett: [01:02:24] anything, anything that was too popular with people that I didn’t think were cool. I just automatically Penn didn’t even give it a chance.
[01:02:33] Christina: [01:02:33] No. I mean it, which is, which is why. Yeah, I can totally see that. And, and we’ve all had those phases and, and, um, that was like why I was like a very like hidden max Martin fan for such a long time. And of course he’s the, uh, songwriter behind all the boy band and Brittany Spears and, and songs and whatnot.
[01:02:54] And like, I liked those pop songs, but I was never going to admit that, like I wanted to. To like, you know, in [01:03:00] high school, like, feel like I liked the, you know, more artsy and, and, um, although it was still mainstream, so it’s hardly, uh, whatever, but, you know, I was in my kind of more indie kind of, I don’t know, it wasn’t in my indie lo-fi phase yet.
[01:03:14] I guess it was more alternative rock, but yeah, you know, that’s a very common thing, but, um, I mean, a lot of this was, was 19 when jagged little pill came out. I think Fiona was 18 when, um, Um, her first album came out, so they were young. Right. But it’s interesting because a lot of times I do kind of compare little earthquakes to jagged little pill.
[01:03:35] Cause they’re both angry, but in different ways and. Although, um, jagged little pill is the far more commercial record, which is evidenced by the fact that it’s sold something like 27 million copies or whatever, you know, it’s, it’s indisputable that little earthquake and in Toria was only a few years older.
[01:03:53] Um, when, when that came out, um, it’s like indisputable that, that [01:04:00] is like the much more artistic like
[01:04:03]Brett: [01:04:03] do you remember Boris, the sprinkler? Do you remember, do you remember the Quincy punks? These, these, these were the bands that I eat a bowl of fuck by the Quincy punks. That was, that was like 1999 for me. Uh, drugs and masturbation by Boris the sprinkler. This is what, this is what I understood. Uh, I, I don’t know anything about any of the, the pop music from that era.
[01:04:32] Christina: [01:04:32] Yeah. Yeah, no, I mean, well, it was the pop of that era was all the boy bands. Uh, the rock of that era was like, cause alternative rock was, was pretty big and, and harder rock was, it was slightly bigger. So you had like, you had good the bands like corn and um,
[01:04:47] Brett: [01:04:47] I was too cool for a corn.
[01:04:49] Christina: [01:04:49] Of course you were, of course you were going to, but I’m just, but yet things like that.
[01:04:52] I recently, I found it on an old playlist because I was going through old mini disks, which is a whole other thing. And I found like buck Cherie. And I was like, Oh [01:05:00] yeah, I remember Bookshare.
[01:05:02] Brett: [01:05:02] Um, do you, do you ever get into underworld? Uh, like dark and long and cowgirl, like those that was as close to pop. There was an album. Uh, I don’t remember what year, but it w it was, I’m pretty sure it came out somewhere between 96 and 2000 called, uh, it was, uh, a group called the eighteens
[01:05:24] Christina: [01:05:24] Oh, yeah. Yeah, they would be Swedish.
[01:05:26] Brett: [01:05:26] It was an album of entirely Abba covers
[01:05:30] Christina: [01:05:30] Yeah.
[01:05:30] Brett: [01:05:30] or Abba.
[01:05:31] Christina: [01:05:31] yeah, yeah, exactly. Yeah, no, no. I’m, I’m we’re 18 because they had a TV show. Um, they were like an Abbott tribute band or whatever. Um,
[01:05:39] Brett: [01:05:39] loved that shit. I had, I, my girlfriend and I had this whole like synchronized dance
[01:05:45] Christina: [01:05:45] Oh, that’s awesome.
[01:05:46] Brett: [01:05:46] to like, I don’t know, mama Mia or, or Boulay VU or something. And like that stuff was fun. I used to go there’s this club in Minneapolis, you may be familiar with from purple rain called, uh, Oh my God. [01:06:00] W, well, I just blanked on the name of the club first Avenue.
[01:06:03] Um, I used to go to first Avenue for their two for one dance nights. Uh, it was the numbers two 41, but the drinks were also two for one. Um, and they would play underworld and, and occasionally just as a, as a joke, they would throw in a covers and like, I love to dance. Uh, like that was
[01:06:25] Christina: [01:06:25] w well, here’s, what’s hilarious about that to me. Okay. So, and I was wrong. The 18th didn’t have, um, a TV show that was S club seven, but I remember, but I remember the eighteens very well, cause they were like the cover thing. And like you had Aqua who did like the Barbie girl song and stuff like that, but like, okay.
[01:06:41] But that Swedish pop, right. And, and the, all the boy band stuff. Is all the product of, um, um, Shannon, uh, records, which was max Martin. And, um, I can’t think of the guy’s name right now. He died of cancer, um, fairly, um, early into like the rise [01:07:00] of the boy band thing, but that was all their stuff. And they got their start with what was our generation’s ABA to a lesser extent, which was, um, ACE of base.
[01:07:10] Brett: [01:07:10] I remember as a base.
[01:07:12] Christina: [01:07:12] Yeah. Well, EISA base was huge, but, but it’s just funny. There’s a great book, uh, genuinely that you should listen to because the audio book is really good. But there’s also a Kindle version. So this is a free suggestion for anybody out there. And it’s called the song machine and it’s by John Seabrook, who is a staff writer at the new Yorker.
[01:07:32] And it is it’s, um, it’s about seven years old now. But, um, and so some of the stuff isn’t completely up-to-date in terms of how modern songs are written, but it’s kind of a, a look at like the machine of like how. The same kind of group of people have been responsible for making and, and teams have been responsible in different areas of making, like being responsible for popular music.
[01:07:58] And it’s really interesting [01:08:00] to kind of look at like the, the Swedish influence. On pop in general because it’s massive. Like it’s massive. Uh, and, uh, but it’s, it’s an, it’s amazing to me. I love this about you. Like you reject any of the boy band stuff and I understand why it’s not cool. It’s, it’s definitely, you know, like the dance moves, whatever horrible.
[01:08:20] Like I get all that, but yet you loved the eighteens and I think you loved it cause you like to dance. And also you’d like the kitchen element and you’re like, Oh, this is, and you’re like, this is an ironic kind of thing. Right?
[01:08:31] Brett: [01:08:31] Yeah. It’s almost anti-pop.
[01:08:33] Christina: [01:08:33] 100% and I get it cause like I like to Aqua who did the, the Barbie girl song for the same reason, like a, I thought the music video was great.
[01:08:41] B the song was really clever. Like I totally get it. Like it wasn’t Ernest and its thing, but it’s just good. It’s kind of like a, what was the, what was movie that, uh, Rachel McAdams and welfare or in the, um, Euro? Um,
[01:08:55] Brett: [01:08:55] Oh, yeah.
[01:08:56] Christina: [01:08:56] yeah.
[01:08:57] Brett: [01:08:57] I forget what that was called, but that was [01:09:00] hilarious. I
[01:09:00] Christina: [01:09:00] But it was great and the music was good. Right. And like, Eurovision is awesome. Cause it’s kitschy, like it’s 100% kitsch. Uh, but it’s always the Nordic countries that two really well, um, in that. Right. Like always because that’s,
[01:09:15] Brett: [01:09:15] Why is that though?
[01:09:18] Christina: [01:09:18] it’s really interesting.
[01:09:18] Brett: [01:09:18] They also make some of the best metal comes out of Nordic countries.
[01:09:24] Christina: [01:09:24] yeah.
[01:09:24] Brett: [01:09:24] How, how do, how does the same place produce like really good pop and really good metal?
[01:09:32] Christina: [01:09:32] well, and here’s, what’s really messed up. A lot of them are connected. So the guy who started the record label or the studio or whatever were max Martin and in his whole ilk came up was like a long haired, like heavy metal guy. And it just turned out that he had a real ear for being able to do. These kinds of catchy pop tune melodies, which is, it’s such a weird dichotomy.
[01:09:59] Right. But you’re right. [01:10:00] It is like they have the great, like incredibly heavy metal, but also this pop stuff. And I have no idea why. Um, but, uh, maybe there’s something in the water. I don’t know. Like there has to be right
[01:10:12] Brett: [01:10:12] fresh Nordic water. Speaking
[01:10:14] Christina: [01:10:14] Has
[01:10:14] Brett: [01:10:14] today’s Sunday, SPO is brought to you by Fuji. No, that’s not true. You can you stomach one more sponsor.
[01:10:22] Christina: [01:10:22] Of course we can because we’re brought to it because it’s text expander who we
[01:10:25] Brett: [01:10:25] Just to prove we’re still a tech show. We’re going to have a tech sponsor. So there’s this app for Mac, actually for Mac and windows and iOS. Um,
[01:10:37] Christina: [01:10:37] And there’s a web version.
[01:10:38] Brett: [01:10:38] is there really. Good to know, um, it’s called text expander and it, it lets you, uh, it prevents you from repeating yourself and typing things over and over by storing snippets of text as long as they need to be and triggering them with just short, uh, [01:11:00] abbreviations.
[01:11:00] So like for me, if I T if I, and you can get like complicated with it and you can write scripts.
[01:11:07] Christina: [01:11:07] Scripts, which are awesome. Yep.
[01:11:09] Brett: [01:11:09] So for me, if someone needs a cross-grade license for Mark, if they’re using the Mac app store version and sandboxing is preventing them from doing something advanced with it, I can type in an email response.
[01:11:21] I type comma, comma, M L I C, and then I hit the space bar and it. Goes out. It gets them UN it uses the paddle API, gets them a new serial number and writes the entire email for me. All I have to do is fill in the name and, and it’s done and it saves me every time I use that snippet. It saves me probably 10 minutes of time.
[01:11:44] Okay. Five minutes, but still I use it pretty frequently. I like I could not live without TextExpander.
[01:11:51] Christina: [01:11:51] no, I couldn’t either. And I, um, so obviously this, isn’t the thing that I have to do super regularly now all the way do you still have to do when I do [01:12:00] presentations and conferences, we’re doing it remotely. I still use it, but one of the ways. I really love to use like the scripting ability and other stuff would be.
[01:12:07] So when I was doing Microsoft ignite the tour, um, one of the demos that I would do, cause I would do like the first year, it was an hour, the second year, it was 45 minutes. It was doing like this jam packed presentation on Azure fundamentals. And like there’s so much stuff that you’re going through there.
[01:12:23] And one of the things that I would be doing would be kind of like a CLI demo and um, Although I like know the commands. It’s one of those things where, when you’re typing it into a box live, uh, you know, you could get something wrong. You don’t want to like run into an issue where you might create a VM the wrong way or whatever.
[01:12:40] And so I like had a text expander snippet to just insert in not just the commands I needed, but the more important thing was I had a dummy SSH key created so that when I was going through the portal of creating my SSH key, it would insert it. Every time and, and it was great. It saved a ton of time. I ran into an [01:13:00] issue, but I was sort of saved cause there’s a Chrome version.
[01:13:02] Um, uh, that had unfortunately come out by the time I needed this, where my main laptop was not working. And so I had to use someone else’s and then the issue is I’m like, well, shit. Like, what am I going to do? Cause I don’t have my snippets. Like if I don’t have that, like I don’t have. Like my SSH key and you know, like, what am I going to do?
[01:13:22] So, but because there’s, it works in Chrome. Like I was able to, you know, bring that in and kind of sync it over, uh, and do it, which is really nice. But like you said, on Mac iOS, you know, you can use it with Apple scripts. You can have it call other scripts too, but it’s also cross-platform. And so the same, um, like plain tax stuff, or, uh, I guess if you were using JavaScript or something, sort of scripting will work
[01:13:45] Brett: [01:13:45] JavaScript for automation stuff does work on iOS as well, which is awesome. Um, you can also, uh, in addition to just having, you know, uh, your, your repetitive text taking care of, uh, and, and [01:14:00] taking care of consistently without spelling errors, you can also personalize it by sticking in, uh, fill-ins.
[01:14:06] Which let you, when you trigger the snippet, it pops up and it asks you to fill in a couple of fields and you can define what fields and what drop-downs are in this, in this popup. And then it customize your snippet for you. So you’re not sending the exact same thing to everybody and can make it very personalized.
[01:14:26] Um, so. As, uh, as a special bonus for overtired listeners, you can get 20% off your first year of text expander by going to text expander.com/podcast. And you’ll learn everything you need to know about it, and you’ll save 20%. So I cannot highly enough recommend you go check this out.
[01:14:53] Christina: [01:14:53] yeah, w plus one on this, like genuinely, uh, we thank thank them for sponsoring our show, but also this is one of those apps that I’ve paid for [01:15:00] four years and, uh, that I love and.
[01:15:03] Brett: [01:15:03] would talk about them, even if they weren’t paying me.
[01:15:06] Christina: [01:15:06] So what I, so what I genuinely like when people are always wanting to know, like one of my top five Mac apps, like this is always in my list because it’s one of those that I don’t know what to do without it, to the point that, like I said, I was installing that Chrome extension so that I could like use it in a demo.
[01:15:24] Cause I was like, I don’t know, like what my commands are for certain things. Cause I just have it so highly automated, you know?
[01:15:31] Brett: [01:15:31] Speaking of top five Mac apps, we don’t have time to get to it, but we’re definitely next week going to talk about how weird it is that GQ magazine put out like their list of indispensable Mac apps. And
[01:15:44] Christina: [01:15:44] it’s good. No, I was looking at this now. Now I think, I think in fairness, this, this is, this is slightly important to say this was GQ UK. And the reason I say that is that I don’t know, like
[01:15:56] Brett: [01:15:56] That’s like the difference between teen Vogue and Vogue.
[01:15:59] Christina: [01:15:59] Yeah, I [01:16:00] kind of, I’m kind of feeling like the UK people are better. Maybe. I don’t know. Although it’s still Connie Nass actually.
[01:16:04] So they didn’t license it.
[01:16:06] Brett: [01:16:06] but I mean like PC magazine has put out lists like this that were
[01:16:11] Christina: [01:16:11] Are so much worse. No.
[01:16:13] Brett: [01:16:13] they picked the wrong apps.
[01:16:15] Christina: [01:16:15] No. Well, this is what was shocking to me. I was like looking through this list and I was like, there is nothing on this list that I disagree with for having an inclusion. Like maybe there would be some apps that I would like put in place of others, but there’s
[01:16:29] Brett: [01:16:29] included moon. Like moon is awesome for window management and no one ever mentions it in the larger publications. Like that’s
[01:16:36] Christina: [01:16:36] I agree. I think they mentioned solver, um, which is like a solver solvers, like not an app people know, uh, net Newswire, which is back in which again, like the major publications don’t even mention. Um, yeah, no, this is like a fantastic list. Uh, Hazel also not
[01:16:54] Brett: [01:16:54] Better touch tool.
[01:16:57] Christina: [01:16:57] like the whole list.
[01:16:58] This is genuinely like we [01:17:00] could have written this list and, and no one would have blinked and I they’ve have been like, yeah, that’s that’s what actual Mac
[01:17:06] Brett: [01:17:06] Actually I think I have written that list. Maybe they read my blog.
[01:17:10] Christina: [01:17:10] Clearly we’ll know. I mean, this is what was impressive to me about it. Cause like I’ve been in the long, but I’ll, I’ll go on a tangent here.
[01:17:16] Like I’ve been in, you know, the content creation game asks of you. But I worked at like mainstream publications and especially at a place like Mashable, which is very mainstream. And although I’m incredibly proud of the work that I did there. And I look back in retrospect and I’m like, Holy shit, I got some nerdy, nerdy ass.
[01:17:34] Shit and Mashable and I did, and I’m like shocked, like in retrospect, I look back I’m like, how in the hell did I convince people to let me do that? And then I think back I’m like, Oh yeah, there were battles. And, and it was hard for sometimes, but like I, and I’m, you know, nothing, if not persistent, but like, you know, we would have stuff that was, um, and this is how I personally gained credit.
[01:17:58] Gained credibility, if not the whole [01:18:00] publication itself. Um, cause it didn’t continue after I left, but like, you know, I would, you know, really try to have really good stuff, but it was not the sort of content you would expect if you’re thinking like a Mashable. And so I look at something like this and I’m like, I know how these games work.
[01:18:15] And like, this is something that somebody is assigned. Because it’s going to rank well on SEO, somebody is going to be searching, you know, best Mac apps and they want to show up in the results. They want to like juice it. I get it. So it’s, it’s one of those evergreen sort of utility posts, nothing wrong with it.
[01:18:30] The thing is how most of the time it works is that you assign something like this and the writer usually doesn’t know a lot about. The subject area, because they’re usually an intern or they’re a junior writer. And so they just start Googling other lists and they rewrite from those lists. And usually you see the same kind of hodgepodge of let’s be honest, like not great applications listed.
[01:18:57] And that’s because the list that rank well [01:19:00] are usually designed by companies who are trying to sell those apps, uh,
[01:19:03] Brett: [01:19:03] that can afford, can afford all the SEO tricks.
[01:19:07] Christina: [01:19:07] Exactly right. Rather than people who’ve actually used it. So I look at this list and I’m like, this is not that right. Like, like solver and moon are not part of those things.
[01:19:17] Better touch tool. Like fantastic ally. This is, this is definitely from somebody who I like it reads reads to me is like somebody who’s actually used these. And it was like, this is my own workflow, which I appreciate, but was just shocked by because it’s in GQ. Which who knew?
[01:19:34]Brett: [01:19:34] It’s cool stuff. All right. So we did talk about it.
[01:19:38] Christina: [01:19:38] we did talk about it.
[01:19:39] Brett: [01:19:39] fit it in, and now we’re, we’re still a tech show.
[01:19:42] Christina: [01:19:42] We are still a tech
[01:19:43] Brett: [01:19:43] can talk about Taylor Swift and Tori ammos and still be a tech show. That’s why we’ve proved. We have proved that we can be both. Yeah,
[01:19:52] Christina: [01:19:52] we have multitudes. Also make sure you put your playlist in for
[01:19:56] Brett: [01:19:56] my BPD playlist. That’s what it’s called BPD.
[01:20:00] [01:20:00] Christina: [01:20:00] Yeah. I mean, if you’re, if you’re willing to, you can copy it and share it to another thing. If that’s what you, if you don’t want to share the actual one, but I want to listen
[01:20:06] Brett: [01:20:06] I would be curious if you made a playlist called OCD, what would be on it? Make a playlist called OCD and
[01:20:13] Christina: [01:20:13] I will.
[01:20:15] Brett: [01:20:15] that fits your own personal disorder.
[01:20:17]Christina: [01:20:17] Oh yeah, no, totally. Well, mine would just be like depressed depression. Um, it would be good, but no, actually that’s not a bad, that’s a good idea. I love playlists. I love making playlists so much. I’ve been working on one for my friend, Ricky for months and, um, I owe it to them and, and, uh, Ricky, I’m sorry that it’s delayed, but I will get it to you.
[01:20:37] Uh, but, um, cause I made like a really good one after folklore came out. Uh, but before evermore dead where it was all songs that like were that mood because somebody wanted. Somebody who was like not a Taylor Swift fan who became a Taylor Swift fan after folklore. It was like, I want to listen to more stuff like this.
[01:20:52] And so it’s really Taylor Swift heavy, but it also has some other things on it. It actually has some Elliot Smith on it. Uh, and, uh, Anson Tori [01:21:00] Amos, actually. So,
[01:21:02] Brett: [01:21:02] you should share that one.
[01:21:03] Christina: [01:21:03] actually I will, I was going to say, I’m going to pull that up right
[01:21:06] Brett: [01:21:06] me a link.
[01:21:07] Christina: [01:21:07] I will, I will put that in the Quip document, but uh, I’ll, I’ll have it an Apple music and on, um, Spotify, uh, because I’m one of those people are your Spotify person, right?
[01:21:18] Yeah. Um, so, but yeah, I, I love making playlists. That’s one of my favorite things. So weirdly I don’t know if I have an OCD playlist except the art and making a playlist itself for me is a very OCD
[01:21:32] Brett: [01:21:32] Yeah, they’re all OCD.
[01:21:35] Christina: [01:21:35] totally will know. Cause the whole thing is like, I want sup usually to fit like a mood and a progression.
[01:21:41] And like, when I, I used to make lists for my playlist, my mom and CDs for her all the time for like mother’s day or her birthday or whatever. And, you know, would often try to like, like a meet her, like at one, one year, which was one of my better ones, actually, all of music. I knew that she would like, but like was new music stuff that she would never [01:22:00] hear on the radio or anything.
[01:22:01] And like I opened and closed it with the same song, but it was performed like. By different people. Um, you know, that’s the sort of OCD shit that I’ll do, you know, to try to like, have like the, the, you know, bookends of something. Yeah.
[01:22:16] Brett: [01:22:16] All right. Well, I hope your, your eye fully recovers and it continues to be healthy after that.
[01:22:24] Christina: [01:22:24] Yeah. Thank you. And, and honestly, I’m just glad, like I never thought that my laziness and not. Getting my like, cause, cause here’s the thing my prescription and I had ordered conducts beforehand, but I clearly hadn’t ordered enough if I had say ordered like six months worth of contacts in December, which I should have, I would have been, um, another year before I went to the eye doctor. And Hey, maybe nothing would have happened, but, um, in the, in retrospect I’m like super glad that my, uh, like laziness [01:23:00] forced me to have an emergency appointment at a Costco.
[01:23:02] Brett: [01:23:02] yet another tale of laziness Pang off.
[01:23:07] Christina: [01:23:07] Right.
[01:23:07] Brett: [01:23:07] It’s a long list.
[01:23:09] Christina: [01:23:09] It is
[01:23:11] Brett: [01:23:11] well, Christina, get some sleep.
[01:23:13] Christina: [01:23:13] get some sleep, Brett.

Feb 10, 2021 • 16min
226: Eight and a Half
Overtired becomes the only tech show to really tackle the #FreeBritney movement. Plus E-ink tablet comparisons and some great apps. Because this is, ostensibly, a tech show.
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Show Links
Remarkable
Kindle Paperwhite
Kindle Oasis
Kobo
Onyx Books Note Air
My Deep Guide – YouTube
The Best 10.3" E-Ink Tablet: Remarkable 2 vs Boox Note Air vs Supernote A5X – YouTube
The Tragedy of Britney Spears – Rolling Stone
BetterTouchTool
BetterSnapTool
Moom
MacUpdater
Bunch Beta
Ultimate Hacking Keyboard
Acorn
Retrobatch
Homebridge
Join the Community
See you on Discord!
Thanks!
You’re downloading today’s show from CacheFly’s network
BackBeat Media Podcast Network
Check out more episodes at overtiredpod.com and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Find Brett as @ttscoff and Christina as @film_girl, and follow Overtired at @ovrtrd on Twitter.
Transcript
Christina
[00:00:00] Brett:Listening to over-tired. I’m Brett Terpstra here with Christina Warren. How’s it going, Christina?
Christina:It’s going pretty good. How are you Brett?
Brett:I I’m, I’m getting so good at these intros that it’s almost boring now.
Christina:Right. You’re like feeling like I need to mess it up so that it can feel normal.
Brett:I’m I’m sometimes when I’m more scattered. Like I’ll think the words through in my head, but then they’ll come out in a completely different order. It’s very flustering when that happens, which I believe leads to. That’s just good radio. Yeah know.
Christina:Agreed. It is. It’s just good radio.
Brett:So, so we have this topic, uh, I do, do you have any health corner updates?
Christina:I don’t have any health corner updates. I was going to ask you because yeah, we have a topic that we’ve punted for like four weeks that we have to get to, but we have to also start with our like Brett slash Christina’s health corner stuff.
Brett:yeah, like our core [00:01:00] segments
Christina:that is our core
Brett:that end the, who did Christina piss off this week segment.
Christina:totally. Which, um, I don’t think is anybody so
Brett:and I don’t really have a, uh, like my sleep has settled down. I haven’t like that whole like manic cycle a week thing chilled out. Haven’t had one, since we last talked, um, my sleep has been decent. I’ve been getting like seven hours a night. Which is it’s it’s enough to get through, but I’m definitely more, uh, relaxed and less anxious if I sleep for eight to eight and a half hours a night. So I’m just on the cusp of being like tired all day.
Christina:Hence the name of the show.
Brett:It’s it’s true. It’s true. Except I’m I’m like, I’m just tired, not over tired.
Christina:So tired. We’ll get there.
[00:02:00] Brett:Um, yeah. Yeah. So, so, uh, this topic we’ve been punting on because it’s not like, uh, it’s, it’s not an inflammatory or divisive topic for most people and it’s, it’s not the most exciting thing we’ve had to talk about over the last few months, It is something that you have invested some time in. So let’s talk about this state of eating tablets.
Christina:Yes, it’s something I’ve invested, not just time but money. And, uh, now obviously that could be a lot of things that have invested money in because as we discussed before, that’s how I’ve been dealing with the whole last year is just to blindly buy things. Um, I don’t eat my feelings, I buy them. So, um, I’m not sure what’s more unhealthy to be totally honest.
Uh, anyway,
Brett:bill.
Christina:I mean, yeah, but like, I don’t have any debt, so it’s, I don’t know. Um, I also don’t have a house. So, you know, it, [00:03:00] it is what it is. Uh, yeah, so tablets. So this is an interesting thing. I hadn’t really thought about the state of, of eating tablets in a really long time. And a couple of years ago, I guess, close to four years ago now a tablet called the remarkable came out and it, along with another tablet.
Tony, we’re kind of this next wave of eating tablets that were more than just, um, and an eating for, for, uh, listeners who might not be. Aware is the technology that basically it’s what Kendall uses and other e-readers, and it is a fairly low refresh display, all that they’re getting faster that lets you have a more paper like experience.
So it’s really crisp. It’s very readable, especially in sunlight or direct light. Although some of these, um, tablets like the Kendall, um, uh, paper light and or paper white rather, and the Oasis and, and other, um, uh, Uh, th I think like [00:04:00] kobu has a couple of like half front lights too, so you can read them in the dark.
But the whole idea is that they’re easy on your eyes. They’re crisp and high resolution, and they have really good battery life. And so a lot of people really prefer them. To like reading on a phone or an iPad because the screen is better on your eyes, but there’s this secondary kind of market for ink other than just readers, which is for note taking tablets.
So a company called remarkable, I think they’re Swedish. They might be finished, but they’re, or they’re based in Europe, um, came out with something about four years ago called the remarkable one. Sony also had a tablet and these were fairly large, like 10 inch tablets that would actually let you write on them.
And then the whole idea was to kind of recreate the writing on paper feeling so really low latency using IE ink so that the idea would be, you could write just like you were writing on paper, but it’s digital. You [00:05:00] could use OCR to convert your handwritten notes to text. Or to search things and, um, you know, you could annotate, uh, like, like PDFs and, and stuff like that.
So I was always sort of interested in the remarkable tablet when that first came out, but it was really expensive. It had some missing features. I just didn’t quite know if I wanted to make the investment. So actually in 2018, I wound up getting a, um, What did I get? I, I got an iPad pro 11 inch instead with the Apple pencil, which was more expensive, but I was like, you know what, that’s going to be a better device for me.
Fast forward to last year, uh, 20, 28, it was March, um, remarkable, announced their remarkable two tablet. And they were like, it’s going to be sleeker. It has better battery life. It has kind of an updated screen. It has even lower latency. And it’s going to be out in like, I think the first we’re saying June.
And so I pre-ordered one. And, um, it [00:06:00] didn’t come out in June. It didn’t come out in July. It didn’t come out in August. It didn’t come out September. It didn’t come out in October. I wound up finally getting it, I think like the first week of November. So this was now, you know, more than six months since I, I pre-ordered it.
Um, and at that point, you know, like I’d already paid for it. Like I, you know what I mean? Like, I’d put it on the credit card. I had already paid it off. It was kind of like, okay, whatever, I’ll get this thing. And I got it. And I liked it, but it’s fairly limited in some of the stuff you can do for it there.
Um, it’s really designed primarily as a single task device. So it was really designed for people who really take a lot of notes and really want to recreate that like handwriting on paper experience. Yeah. You can, you can read PDFs or, or EPUBs on it. It has, you know, a pretty terrible e-reader built into it.
Yeah. You can kind of transfer their documents in and out, but it’s really designed to be. Like a note taking device, like that’s really what it’s about. And they ha they, they try to have like a very Apple-like [00:07:00] experience. Um, but they’ve been like advertising themselves all over Instagram and Facebook and stuff.
And so they’ve been pretty popular from what I can understand. Um, I think that they’re like, if you try to order from the remarkable to now, it’s a couple of weeks out to get an order, but they’re not, it’s not like, uh, you know, uh, the, the month. Like the month long waits that it was. But when I got there, by the time I got the remarkable to another device had come out called the, um, books, um, the Onyx books, note air, and this is, um, Onyx or books.
I think books is the, is the device name. And then annex is the brand name is a Chinese company and they use E ink. But. Rather than using kind of a customized Linux kernel, which is what remarkable uses. They are actually using Android as a base. And they, um, have many of the same features as the remarkable, but because it uses Android, you can use [00:08:00] other Android apps with it too.
So you can side load. That Kendall app or the Kobo app or audible, or, you know, other, um, applications. So you can do more things with it. You can SSH into it more easily. You can transfer stuff to Dropbox or one drive or, or whatever more easily, but it also has built in writing functionality so that you can do like the OCR and the, um, note taking stuff in and transfer things over.
And so. They launched like literally right as the remarkable too was I was getting, they launched, um, the, um, Onyx books, note air, and that was priced about the same as the remarkable two tablets, actually a little bit less, I think, um, once all kind of the accessories were involved, but on the face of it, a more powerful device.
And so I went ahead and I ordered that one too. And right. So I got that one and then Onyx actually reached out to me and they sent me the, um, [00:09:00] Books, max Lummi, which is very similar to the note air, except it is a 13 inch device rather than 10 inches. So it’s really big and it’s more powerful. Like it’s, it’s got more Ram, it’s got, uh, you know, a faster processor and they sent that to me.
And so I’ve been reviewing that and, um, I’ve also been reviewing, you know, the, the books, note air, and the remarkable too, which I purchased and, um, You know, I, I talked a little bit about this on rocket, but I can talk more in depth about it here. And I’d love you to ask me questions and, and things that, you know, you would want to know about this if you’re interested at all.
But, um, this is a really niche product area, like, but it’s also kind of cool. Like I’m not gonna lie. Like there’s something like the latency, um, on the remarkable too. The thing I’ll say about it is, is that, although I think the software is limited and kind of buggy and. Not really as robust as it should [00:10:00] be.
Like it, the hardware is really good, but it’s a really let down by the software. And I don’t think they’ve invested enough in the software. Um, but the experience of writing on it is to use upon remarkable. Like it, it is a better experience than writing with my iPad pro like
Brett:so.
Christina:does, it does feel like writing on paper.
Brett:Are you a person who writes on paper,
Christina:Typically? No, no, but I do have to take notes and I do like the idea of sometimes, maybe Kirby, my ADHD, to be totally honest, by doing more note taking stuff. And typically the reason I don’t write on paper is because I don’t then want to have to like convert it into something that I can use digitally.
Like that’s my big thing, right? Is that I’m going to need to access whatever I’m writing on paper. Like digitally. So I used to have a bunch of mole, skins and other stuff, and like, um, and jot calendars and planners and things like that. And I really liked the idea, but I was like, I can’t access this, you know, [00:11:00] anyway, and I, over the years I’ve like looked at things like there was like a pin that would sync with Evernote and, you know yeah.
And, and, and stuff like that. And like, you know,
Brett:paper that you could like yeah. Yeah.
Christina:Yeah, exactly. And, and like, that was okay, but you know, like that’s still requires a whole other kind of level of, I don’t know, like for me I’m such a, uh, digital, um, person that, uh, I like the act of writing and I think it’s important for me as bad as my handwriting is, but I think it can be better for my, for my memory and for my attention span, but I like need it digitized.
Brett:Yeah, I do buy that. The act of writing on its own, just like handwriting, something out makes you remember it more than typing it and way more than just listening to it. Like, for me, that’s true, but I hate writing so much. Like I don’t write. I write so little that my hand cramps [00:12:00] just signing my name.
Christina:yeah.
Brett:is so not used to writing.
Christina:Yeah, that’s how I am too. That’s how I am too. So it’s been like a, a, an interesting, um, I guess, journey to have to kind of teach myself to write again, if that makes any sense.
Brett:So how does the, something like the remarkable, how does it solve the, so, like, I had a bunch of mole skins, and I was pretty good for a while about, uh, back when I had like client meetings and stuff. If I just scribbled on. Uh, notepad while the meeting was happening, I would remember the meeting better, but I would get annoyed that I couldn’t search.
So I started using, like, I bought a, it was made by mole skin, but it was really just a folder and it could hold index cards. So I would use one index card per meeting
Christina:Oh, that’s smart.
Brett:scan that index card when I got back and I’d put it in Evernote, which then would make my handwriting [00:13:00] moderately searchable. Um, like the lack of searchability is what killed mole skins for me.
Does the remote markable allow, does it OCR and search your text?
Christina:Yes. Yeah. Um, the, the, the books does a better job than the remarkable does, but yet they both do it. Um, I like the books better to be totally honest. Uh, I think the remarkable is like one of those things where they have a really good, like. Experience from kind of like the factory onward. Um, and part of me would kind of want to root for them to be like, Oh, you know, they’re, they, they they’ve, you know, kind of pioneered a lot of this stuff, but, but to be totally honest, the book stuff has done a better job with it.
Um, but yeah, they both do that. And, and in fact, the book stuff can even do like offline OCR stuff. You have to be connected to the internet to do those CR. And the search stuff on, um, the, uh, remarkable too, but yeah, it’ll let you search that stuff, which is really, really nice. And so that’s one of the reasons why I’m using it, the downside with both of [00:14:00] them, um, is that if you use an app like OneNote or Evernote or something like you can’t integrate directly into that without importing those notes into, you know, one of those systems, um, even though.
The, the books that the note air and the max Lumi, both work with Android. Those, uh, note taking applications have not been optimized in any way, shape or form for E ink. So you cannot use those apps themselves to take notes. So if that’s what you want, like that’s not gonna happen. You are really better off with an iPad or using, um, like if, if you’re a windows user using, you know, um, one of the pen, um, You know, systems like a surface or something which works really well with one note.
But what you can do is you can import like as a PDF or as something else, you know, the file into your OneNote notebook, and then you can search it so you can still work with it that way. It’s just not one of those things where like, you can open up a OneNote page and start writing. You’re [00:15:00] going to open up a page in another app and then, you know, later like import it so that you can have access to it.
Brett:pull me over and tickle me pink
Christina:What’s that
Brett:and would actually make me buy one of these just for the novelty of it. It could. Uh, store marked down versions of my handwritten notes in Dropbox
Christina:I know.
Brett:writer and NBA ultra could access them.
Christina:I know. I know. And, and that, from what I, from what I can tell, at least so far, there’s been no, like conversion to Mark down, although. On both of them. I think it might be slightly easier on the remarkable, because at least extensively their stuff is more open source, although, you know?
Brett:What if a PD. If a PDF is saved with an OCR layer, uh, with searchable texts, I have tools that can convert that to Mark down. So if it were store, if like those PDFs were stored, In some kind of accessible sync system, [00:16:00] whether it’s a one drive or Google drive or Dropbox, somewhere that like Hazel could pick up these PDFs.
I could S I could pull the markdown texts out and put it into my very plain text notes. That would be cool.
Christina:Yeah, you could do that with the books. So we might actually want to try that. What, what I could do is I could, um, give you access to, um, a folder and you could like test it just to see if, if it’ll do what you need it to do.
Brett:I want access to your diary,
Christina:Yeah. That’s exactly it. You be, you be, you be so bored by most of the notes that I take, but, um, dear diary, I had to podcast Brett today.
It was pretty terrible.
Brett:He is the worst. Oh my God. Gag me with a spoon.
Christina:there is, um, there’s this guy on YouTube. Um, his name is, um, um, uh, Valeria and he does this thing called, um, my deep guide. And he does very in depth, like comparisons and like breakdowns about how all of these things work. And so if [00:17:00] you want to know everything about what the latency is like, he has cameras set up to capture like every millisecond of like what it looks like when you’re like.
You know, putting the, the pen down to the screen, if you want to know like how the different software features work, like he has all of that stuff. So we’ve got a link to, to him, um, down, uh, in our show notes. Um, he’s great. Um, I do not have that kind of time to be totally honest. Uh, but I did enjoy like when I was waiting for my things to arrive, um, I did watch his videos and I got a lot out of it from them.
Um, It’s cool though, because you can create like templates and it’s not as easy as it, as it should be. Again, the remarkable I hate to, like, I’m not trying to dog on it because I spent a lot of money on it and I might sell it. I don’t know what I’m going to do with it, but like, it’s a really nice piece of hardware.
It’s just, the software is not there. Whereas the book stuff is really nice. And the max Lummi and the node air are essentially the same device. It’s just the max Lumi [00:18:00] is gigantic. And the note air is, is like, You know, 10 inches. So it was basically kind of the difference between an iPad, um, uh, pro 13 and an iPad pro 11.
The one nice thing about the bigger size I will say is that you can view a PDF without any sort of like having to reframe or move anything at all. Like for technical papers or stuff like it’s going to basically be one-to-one. Um, On the screen, which is really nice if you’re looking at like manuals or technical papers or other sorts of documents, like it’s really, really nice.
So if you’re somebody who annotates a lot and reads a lot of that kind of stuff, uh, the bigger screen is really, really nice for that. Um, I th I find for my own use cases, the smaller screen, probably as a little bit better, just because, um, The the big size would certainly make it less portable, although who’s traveling now anyway, so it doesn’t really matter.
But, um, [00:19:00] but the, the, the max Lumi is, is nice. And the screens, like I will say there is like refresh and like latency things that you can use at least on the, um, on the books devices. And, and I think people have created hacks to do this on the remarkable as well. People created like second screen sort of experiences where they can either, um, broadcast their screen.
From those tablets, you know, to their computer, or they could use it as a secondary monitor. You can do that. It’s not a great experience. It’s going to have kind of a slower refresh thing. Like, you know, these, these things are a lot faster than they used to be, but it’s still not an LCD display. You know what I mean?
Like the refresh is not there, but for, you know, for people who are primarily dealing with notes or if you draw and I don’t draw, but if you draw. Um, people seem to like them, the pens are like, you know, they, they use like Wacam technology and so they have multiple pressure points and you can, you know, use different.
Like if you buy different nibs, it can give you a different feel or experience in like they’re pressure [00:20:00] sensitive. And the software has different types of brush styles and stuff. So you can, you can do pretty advanced stuff. Um, like I would say that if you’re looking for like a, an all around device, an iPad is still going to be better.
Right. But if you’re somebody who takes a lot of notes, likes that experience. Annotates a lot, um, is looking for another toy to kind of like geek out with they’re definitely worth a look. And they’re also, there’s been some movement in E ink in color Inga readers, um, which is getting exciting. And so, um, I think we’re gonna be getting some of those into purview, uh, soon.
So I’ll have more updates on that. Cause that actually is kind of interesting thing. Like, especially for people who might, people who want to read manga, people who want to do other stuff,
Brett:work as readers as
Christina:Oh 100%, 100%.
Brett:in which like I w w in what ecosystem,
Christina:Um, so, so, so the books, you could do it with anything, like, it [00:21:00] literally has an easy way for you to install Google play so you could install and it has Bluetooth and stuff. Built-in so like I have audible and I have Kendall on it, but I could also have stuff in it from, you know, kobu or, um, I don’t think Barnes noble has, I don’t know if they have a reader anymore, but any of those, um, if you’re buying stuff from I books, I don’t know.
There’s probably a way to remove the DRM. Yeah, I get it. It’s called books. I don’t know. I’ve never, I haven’t bought anything from it in a decade. I buy everything from Kendall. Um,
Brett:up on, on the iBookstore a long time ago.
Christina:same, same.
Brett:still have books for sale there. If anyone’s looking.
Christina:Right by them, right? Yeah, no, I, uh, yeah, it’s not, it’s not what I use. I use, I use Kendall Kendall, one that, um, you, if you want to use that on the remarkable, you would need to strip the DRM and then import them in. But on the books, it’s like a completely seamless native process. They even have like an app store that comes installed on it.
That has an older version of the Kindle app that you can install. But yeah. Like, [00:22:00] it’s very easy to install Google play services and install the latest version of the Kendall app and it’ll work just like any other Kendall you’ve ever had. Um, which is, which is great.
Brett:can I tell you where the iBookstore failed me?
Christina:Yes,
Brett:So the iBookstore when you, when you’re an iBox author, it lets you embed HTML. Uh, interactive HTML. So I got excited about this idea. I, with my ex-wife wrote a children’s book and my very talented brother illustrated it. Uh, and the goal like the illustrations were all done in pieces on paper, but in pieces so that I can make a parallax, uh, display of each illustration.
So as you tilted the iPad, It would like it moved as if it were three dimensional and it was really cool in prototype. But when I got into actually [00:23:00] building it and I books author, the way that they handle embedded HTML made it a horrible experience. And I’m still sitting on a pile of. Great illustrations and not too bad of a story.
Uh, I, if a publisher ever approached me, I would just flatten them and, and we would make a print book out of it, but I’m not going to go shop it around because I felt like my, my dream of the kind of interactive children’s book kind of died there.
Christina:That’s a shame. Yeah, I’ve heard a lot. And I think they actually have retired the ebook or I books, author. Um, app and I think now they’re like just use pages,
Brett:Right.
Christina:which, you know
Brett:Yeah. Well, their stuff for like educational texts, they did, they, they put all their eggs into the, uh, educational textbook. Kind of idea like that was where all of their innovative innovation went. [00:24:00] I, I don’t know that it ever caught on
Christina:Uh, I don’t think that it did. Um, I think that. I don’t know. I feel like, yeah, I feel like they put all their eggs in that basket. It I’m sure that the, um, was it the DOJ? I can’t remember what agency it was, but they had to settle the, the price fixing lawsuit. Do you remember that?
Brett:No.
Christina:Yeah. So Apple was accused of price fixing basically, um, They wanted to have the prices be, uh, like a minimum price, which was a higher basically, I guess then maybe what, like Amazon or some other places were selling.
And they were accused of, I guess, working in concert with the publishers to raise the price on eBooks and they were found guilty of this. They had to settle or maybe, I don’t think they were found guilty. I don’t remember what it was. Anyway. They settled. They ended up having to, you know, pay out. A couple hundred million dollars in the settlement.
I remember this cause I wound up getting like $80 or something or a hundred dollars or something in [00:25:00] an ebook credits from Amazon. Um, and, uh, and it wasn’t even like I bought a lot of I book stuff. I think what happened was that Amazon and other people had argued that because of what Apple was doing, they had to sell. Things at higher rates because there’ve been some sort of collusion. I don’t remember all the details. It’s been a decade, but they, they got in trouble, um, uh, for, for price fixing. Um, and so I think that when that happened, I at least, uh, Yeah. Yeah. This was, uh, a price fixing thing. Um, the United States versus Apple was a U S antitrust case in which the court held that Apple Inc conspired to raise the price of eBooks in violation of the Sherman act.
The suit filed in April of 2012, alleged that Apple Inc, and five book publishing companies conspired to raise and fix the prices for eBooks in violation of section one of the Sherman antitrust. In fact, the book publishers are hatchet, a Harper, Collins, publishers, [00:26:00] Macmillan, penguin, and Simon and Schuster, uh, ironically pink when, um, uh, uh, and Simon and Schuster now the same company, uh, along with random house.
So it’s big four, but, uh, uh, only Apple proceeded to trial while the publisher defendant settled their claims. So Apple went to trial, the publisher settled, and then they were, um, uh, found guilty and. Um, yeah, the, uh, the district court ruled that Apple was guilty of conspiring to raise retail prices of eBooks and scheduled a trial in 2014 to determine damages and then Apple settled, um, the, that the case out of court, uh, while they were still appealing.
And they basically, you know, had to, had to pay $450 million. So I think when that happened and that, that, you know, it was brought in 2012, which was only a couple of years into. The program. I don’t know my distinct sense and I could be wrong. Was that Apple kind of stopped caring about eBooks in any way whatsoever after they had to pay [00:27:00] that amount of money for that,
Brett:I don’t, I feel like that’s not enough money to really, if Apple was driven to own a market, that amount of money would not deter them. I feel like there was
Christina:Well, yeah,
Brett:lack of enthusiasm that kind
Christina:Well, I think it was probably both, right. Like I think that it’s probably lack of enthusiasm. They weren’t overtaking Kendall and there wasn’t a way for them to, I think that I, and I think that the, the course argument was that the way, like the government’s argument was that they were trying to, um, own the market by.
Working in collusion with the big publishers to raise prices. And that was what they were trying to do. Cause they were basically like, okay, we don’t want to get into this, this game with Amazon where Amazon sells things at lower prices than us and we can’t win. So we’re going to work across the board and convince publishers to sell everything at a certain price.
And that will, um, uh, [00:28:00] force us to be a more even playing ground. And then we can use our ecosystem and our other things to try to. You know, get a bigger slice of the market. I think that’s what that, that’s what the government’s argument was. Um, you’re right. $450 million. I don’t think would be enough to deter them.
But I think at that point, like Amazon’s lead probably only widened and like they would have had to. Do the same thing Amazon, which was doing, which was like selling stuff below cost as lost leaders. Although ironically, this is how it always happens. Amazon now has minimum prices set by publishers and, you know, their prices have generally gone up, um, than, than what they were a decade ago, which I mean, I’m not opposed to let you know writers get paid, but, um, I think it was probably a combination of both them not already winning and then, okay, well, we tried and we got caught up in this multi year, like, [00:29:00] you know, antitrust case.
So
Brett:All right. I, yeah, I got lost.
Christina:that’s fine. That’s
Brett:that. I did that thing where
Christina:did that thing where like I was talking and you just totally drunk, zoned out.
Brett:I started thinking about the next thing.
Christina:Yeah, let’s talk about the next thing.
Brett:Oh, do we have to though? Okay. So yeah, we, we do
Christina:no, no, no. Let’s talk about, let’s talk about like your nerdy stuff and then, then we’ll, then we’ll get to Britney noble.
Brittany will be kind of a dessert.
Brett:Oh man.
Christina:I mean, we can talk about it. I don’t whatever order you want to go in. I don’t care.
Brett:I’m setting a 10 minute timer.
Christina:Okay. Perfect.
Brett:how long we have to talk about Brittany Spears. All right. Starting now.
Christina:Okay. Did you watch framing Brittany?
Brett:I watched the first, like, I, I think I got almost half an hour into it before. I, I didn’t want to watch it anymore. Uh, it turned out, like [00:30:00] I mentioned to L last night that, uh, I was supposed to watch this for the sake of this show and, and, uh, I, I did, I, wasn’t going to push the point because I, I, I don’t care about Brittany.
Um, But, and, and she was, she was like, now we’re going to watch, you know, uh, the office and Frazier are our fallback shows. And then this morning she’s like, well, I got some time you should watch a little bit of this, this thing. So you’re ready for your show. So we did just this morning, sit down and watch it.
And she said, she said, I’m sorry, we didn’t watch this last night. It’s actually interesting.
Christina:Right. I’m glad that she said that. Thank you L.
Brett:It’s it’s moderately interesting. Tell me, give me the highlight.
Christina:Okay. So this is, um, a production that the New York times, um, is doing. They did a documentary on Hulu. That is basically it’s called framing [00:31:00] Britney Spears. And by framing, they really mean how she’s been framed in the media, like her positioning, not like framing for a crime. And it’s kind of a look at her.
Immediate image over the course of her career, which is now over two decades and really over the last, um, nearly 15 years where she’s been under this conservatorship, which I think we’ve talked about on this show before, uh, in 2008 court’s rule, basically that she is, you know, needs to be under some sort of conservatorship.
And so her father has been in charge of her finances and, um, like her medical care and other things. And this obviously.
Brett:that
Christina:Because she’d had like a series of very high profile, like public breakdowns. Like if people remember she shaved her head, she attacked the paparazzi. Uh, there was an incident where she barricaded herself in her house with her kids.
When our kids were very young and she had to be admitted into a hospital, [00:32:00] she was on a couple of 51 50 stays. Um, her. In addition to that she was doing things that were I, and I’ve got a link to it in that, that I put down there, um, a, a rolling stone article that came out in, um, uh, February of, um, February 21st, 2008.
So this is now. 14 years ago called the tragedy of Brittany Spears, um, from, uh, Vanessa , who is a fantastic writer. And it’s, it’s the, it’s actually really interesting to read. And I think it’s interesting to read that while you watch the documentary, because it puts into context, in my opinion, why the conservatorship happened?
Like she was it’s it’s unfortunate when we look back on it now, because all of us, and I certainly was one of these people, um, treated it as like. If not just an outright joke as like a thing to gawk at, and to just kind of like, we were all kind of, our mouths were gaping, what was happening. Like she was [00:33:00] dating members of the paparazzi.
She was acting 100% erratically, like. Mentally unwell. And in like in, in hindsight, like just really just unhinged behavior and, um, you know, it was around the time that Anna Nicole Smith died and, and there’d been kind of a lot of, you know, this was like the height of the paparazzi kind of culture and celebrity culture thing.
Um, And I, I think that there was this fear and I don’t think it was unfounded, uh, from her family that she was going to die. Like, I really think that they thought that she was, she was on her way to either, you know, um, self-destructing in a way that would, that would lead with, with her death. Um, and so she was put under this conservatorship, which is a really.
Rare thing to happen. It usually happens with older people or other stuff, but she was put under this conservatorship and, um, Where her father had been absent from her life for up until that point, really, he had been very [00:34:00] active, you know, kind of took control of things. And, um, within a couple of years, you know, she was able to perform again.
She was, you know, putting out albums. She did her successful biggest residency and things seem to be on the up and up. And then a couple of years ago when she was going to be announcing her second Vegas residency, Things seem to kind of go off the rails. She seemed to meet at least to meet and not be quite with it anymore.
Um, they ended up canceling the residency by her saying that her father was sick and that she was gonna be focusing on that. Then it turned out that she’d been in treatment at some facility in Los Angeles, um, that, that she shared like later on. And then it gets, in my opinion, this is where it gets, which is to me all, all signs and like rumors were that maybe she was no longer being med compliant or whatever the case may be.
And then it gets to where I feel a little bit uncomfortable, which is that she had fans who had like a [00:35:00] podcast dedicated to her Instagram, who someone left them a voicemail message claiming to have worked as a paralegal for, um, her, uh, You know, uh, the, the lawyers who represented her surface or ship or whatever, um, and basically said that she was desperate to get out of the conservatorship, that she was not a control of anything in her life that she didn’t want it that way.
And it, you know, basically alleging that she’s all been a prisoner, um, you know, in and has no control over anything. Um, she’s now brought to the court like her, her father was temporarily removed as conservator. And somebody else was kind of put in his place. It’s like a temporary thing. Cause he’d had some health problems.
There was also an altercation that he had with one of her sons. And I think that the, her ex-husband who we all made fun of K fed, but real talk. I think he’s actually proven himself to be a pretty good father. And he’s been the one consistent parental force in those kids’ lives. Uh, I think filed a restraining order against the dad or some shit [00:36:00] anyway.
Uh, the, the, the long, the short of it is, is that she has been petitioning the court to remove him as conservator and to put someone else in charge, um, of her finances and other things. And in, in, um, November the court ruled that they were not going to make a decision at that time about his role as conservator, but they did appoint this bank to also be responsible for, um, her, her wealth, which at this point is now like over $60 million.
Um, But, but she has all these fans now who are, have started this hashtag free Brittany movement, where they actively like, want her out from under the conservatorship. And they actively like are, you know, saying that like, you know, she should be free and this and that, and this is where I’m conflicted.
This is where I would, this is kind of why I wanted to talk to you about it. I have no problem. Saying and even thinking like her father is probably not the right person to be in charge of things. I think that he’s [00:37:00] probably should not be the conservator, especially if that’s what she’s saying. Well, I have a problem with though, is there seems to be this, like, I think kind of horrible message that her fans are positioning, which is that Brittany’s completely okay.
And is completely aware of everything that’s happening. And is this like prisoner. And I, I don’t think that’s true. I think that Brittany is really sick and something happened to her in her early twenties, which is not uncommon for people that have mental health breaks and, and no, no like, like people like are diagnosed with schizophrenia and bipolar and, and other things like it’s a very common thing.
I think something like that happened. I’m not a doctor. I’m not going to try and make any sort of diagnosis. It’s none of my business, but reading that Vanessa . Article and rethinking back about what happened in that times. Those are not behaviors of somebody who is okay. And it, it went beyond just drug use, right?
Like some of the [00:38:00] behaviors were just like completely out of control. And maybe you could, you could, you know, shock some of it up to the same thing. But some of it was seriously looking like, you know, somebody who something was happening to them. And I don’t know, I’m, I’m not super okay with the idea that it’s like, We think she’s sitting, that’s hidden messages in her Instagram, which okay.
That’s, that’s insane. And, and, and, and we don’t like her father. And so we think that she should have control over everything when it’s like, I don’t know if Brittany’s okay. I don’t think we’ve ever talked about whether Brittany is okay or not. I don’t think as a culture, like, what does it say when our pop princess might be like mentally unwell?
Like, what does that mean? Right. Like.
Brett:be fair. Um, from CEO’s to pop stars, like people in, uh, famous people in general, I have, if not [00:39:00] more, they have an equal amount of, of mental illness. And I, I don’t feel like that’s. In any way, disqualifying on its own, uh, the fact that she endangered children, or it sounds like she may have endanger children.
That’s that’s, that’s a court matter for sure. Um, like I don’t think her mental health is okay. People are going to diagnose, we tried to diagnose Taylor Swift once. Like, I don’t know if you remember that it was actually the title of an episode where we have no Goldwater rule. We can say,
Christina:no, absolutely.
Brett:we can say she’s not, well, I think the only part of it having seen what I’ve seen, which isn’t much the only part of it that really bugs me is that this is, uh, our time’s up.
This I’ll give you another minute. Um,
this is, uh, this is a topic that people. Uh, really feel the [00:40:00] need to rally and protest and walk around on the street. Carrying signs. I feel like there are just more important things in the world.
Christina:Yeah, no, I think there are more important things to the world. I think the reason people say this though, is because she’s the symbol, right? Like she’s Brittany Spears,
Brett:They did, there were a couple of quotes, the people talking about what she had meant to them. Uh, that she’s the one that made it okay to, to grow up gay. She made it okay to come from the situations they came from. And I get that it’s important. Like that kind of representation in the media. It can be very meaningful to people and very valuable.
Uh, and so I, I can understand. Being willing to walk around the street with a big sign for that. I’m a person who, uh, doesn’t even show up for protest for things I do care about. So it’s not easy for me to fathom, petitioning for a pop star as wellbeing.
Christina:Yeah, no, look, [00:41:00] my, my very unpopular opinion is I think the free Brittany people are nuts. And I think that they’re actively harmful that said, I do think that the issues of the conservatorship and like whether her father should be in control of her money and whether there should be an outsider involved, I think are valid.
And like,
Brett:be
Christina:I mean, I think that there should be like, she, she wanted the court appointed person who was her, who was her temporary conservator she’d wanted that to be permanent. I think that would be fair. Right. Um, like I do feel like there is something to be said, like, cause we don’t know what the deals are.
And like they interviewed somebody who was briefly tried to be her lawyer who tried to petition the court for something. And the court, the judge told him, I’ve seen some like mental health analysis that you’re not allowed to see. And that leads me to believe that there was something so severe that she is not capable of making the decision to hire counsel.
She is not capable of doing that. The counter-argument that people have. And, and I think this is a valid one to consider is okay. If she’s not capable of making those [00:42:00] decisions, then why can she, you know, tour and do these shows? I, that’s not an invalid thing to say, and maybe she should never tour again.
Maybe she should never perform again. That said, like, I also don’t think, you know, people who’ve, who’ve seen her in interviews and I’ve seen her perform and I’ve seen her do other things. I’m just going to be real. She hasn’t seen completely with it. Like she hasn’t seemed completely connected to. You know, like something’s still seemed off.
I’m trying to be really careful here. I don’t want to like be offensive and I don’t want to, I don’t want somebody to discover this one day and try to be like, Oh, you’re, you’re calling her crazy. I don’t know what the hell is wrong with her. Like, I used to be somebody who, like, I was desperate to figure out what, like what the fuck was wrong with Britney Spears.
It’s not my business, but I do feel deeply like something’s not okay. And I become worried with the idea that we’re like, Ignoring that back just to focus on like, Oh, she’s become this prisoner. And it’s like, no, like courts typically don’t get involved in these sorts of [00:43:00] situations unless something is really, really wrong.
And maybe I’m just completely naive, but I don’t believe that like the Los Angeles superior court would like. Actively collude, which is kind of like, it seems like people are saying like, against her so that her father of all people, we be responsible also there’s been no like proof or, or any sort of allegation whatsoever that like her money has been mismanaged at all.
Like if anything. Yeah. And we’re,
Brett:uh,
Christina:saying I wanted to talk about it though. Cause just cause I think it’s interesting to think about like, I don’t know, we don’t talk about this. Like we don’t talk about the idea that like, what if one of our biggest like pop icons is like very sick and what does that mean?
Brett:What does it
Christina:And how do we deal with that?
Brett:Speaking of wellbeing, do you want to talk about ritual?
Christina:I do want to talk about virtual. This is actually a [00:44:00] perfect segue.
Brett:thought so, too.
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Brett:Yay. Do you like how? I, I, I, I made an error in the sponsor read. And had you say forms, your body can actually use twice, like within a sentence of each other?
Christina:I did. And I noticed that and I was like, okay, I’ve just, I’ve just read that twice. It’s a little repetitive, but it’s okay. Ritual is great though. You won’t be repetitive. As long as you take your vitamins.
Brett:Okay. We’re not allowed to make any health
Christina:I know I was going to say, I was like, I’m not, I was actually about to add a disclaimer, making asterisks. Christina is making no claims whatsoever. You may still be repetitive despite taking your vitamins, making no claims there.
Brett:Yeah. You might still have [00:46:00] OCD.
Christina:Yeah, you might. You might still be ADHD and OCD and rambling. Yep.
Brett:so I, uh, back when they first announced the developer toolkit, where Apple would ship you a Silicon at a Mac mini for, for developers to start testing, like right after they announced, uh, the, the, the new chips, um, I, I stupidly. I thought they were selling me a machine for $500 and I jumped on it, uh, read the fine print after I had hit purchase
Christina:Oh, no.
Brett:the fine print that said, Oh, and you’ll have to send this back.
So basically for the last few months I’ve been renting, uh, a nice Mac mini and for what I got out of it, it was not worth [00:47:00] $500, but. Then Apple sent out there, the notice that it was going to be time to return it soon. And it came with the promise of a $200 certificate that you could use towards buying your own.
And, uh, I was like, okay, I recouped a little bit of, you know, cause I’m going to get, I’m going to get a Mac mini. I like the new ones. Um, Then the next morning they said, Hey, we got a lot of feedback about that $200 certificate and we hear you. So we’re making it $500 and you can keep the machine for a few more months.
So I’m good. I’m happy.
Christina:Yeah, no, I was thinking about she, when that happened, I was like, Oh, this will be, this will make bread happy. Yeah. I think that, um, They, uh, they got blow back because it wasn’t necessary. It wasn’t just like the, the amount of, of the credit. Although I think for some people that was part of it, it was the fact that they were like, [00:48:00] Oh yeah, you have to use this by May 31st.
And people were like, yeah, you’re going to announce new chips at WWDC. We know this, we know how you work. What the hell? Like you’re telling me, like, I have to use this and I have to use this now. So I think it’s, that was a really good, um, like. Like elegant on their part. So, I mean, I’m happy for you cause you’re going to $500 to put towards your new Mac mini.
So you didn’t lose anything. Like you basically got kind of an, in some ways like Apple got a free loan from you, but you also got a free loan from them. So, uh, that you’ll be able to put towards getting a Mac mini. The only downside is like, if someone, like, if you had never wanted to buy. Like a Mac Mac, any ever, like, if that weren’t something that would be what we’d want to buy for development, then I could see people being kind of annoyed, but you could also use that $500 towards another product.
So I don’t know.
Brett:yeah. Yeah, no, I’m, I’m happy. I, uh, I have a newish MacBook pro that [00:49:00] I enjoy. I don’t, I don’t use the butterfly keyboard on it. It’s it’s right on the cusp of the, the keyboard change. But in general, as far as like a portable machine goes, I’m, I’m perfectly happy with it. Um, And my minis though, I have two minis that are 20 twelves.
That definitely need some, uh, that, that part of my hardware arsenal needs refreshing. For sure. Wow. Okay. So we got to the last 10 minutes of the show. We kept the Brittany discussion to, I think, a reasonable amount of time
Christina:I think so.
Brett:are, you’re not mad at me. Are you.
Christina:No, not, not, not, not in the slightest.
Brett:Okay.
Christina:I feel like I, I feel like I want to talk to Ella about this now, but, uh, just cause she seems like more interested in this than you, but no
Brett:thoughtful person and she would definitely like she’s coming at it as coming to it as a complete outsider. She
Christina:you’re out.
Brett:cared about Brittany. Like she [00:50:00] doesn’t do pop music at all, but she is a very thoughtful person. And when presented with all the facts in that, uh, in that documentary, she, she could, she could have a very, uh, very, uh, coherent and thoughtful conversation with you.
I should arrange that. We should have a zoom. We should have a Brittany zoom.
Christina:Brittany zoom. That would be amazing. Actually, I would live for that. Um, okay. Um, we now have like another 10 minutes. We, I want to talk all about like Bret stuff. This is how this is in our Quip document. It’s all Brett stuff. So talk to me about some
Brett:there’s this list of things that I keep adding to, like, if we run out of things to talk about here, stuff that, that I find interesting, that we can fill time with, and this list has grown to, uh, about 15 items
Christina:Yeah. And some of it we’ve talked about, like we talked about Caribbean or, um, fixed being fixed without
Brett:And then they broke it again. I had to.
Christina:Oh, God.
Brett:the last beta update carabiner [00:51:00] again, I don’t know how this is happening, but I am. Um, but did we talk about how better touch tool can do the hyper key now?
Christina:no.
Brett:Uh, in the last round of
Christina:Oh, no, maybe we did. Maybe we did so, so better. Okay. So, so better touch school can now be your hyper key, so you don’t even need a carabiner.
Brett:I’m still using carabiner because at this point it’s the more, uh, stable option. Yeah. Uh, but I do believe that better touch will is going to get there. Um, he’s also putting out, uh, he keeps promising in, in, uh, a soon update that, uh, he’s going to support stream deck actions.
Christina:Oh, hell
Brett:Yeah, that could be a lot of fun,
Christina:Yeah. I love better touch tool so much. Um, It’s so good. Uh, he’s fantastic. Everybody should give him his book, like give him your money. Um,
Brett:Here’s the cool thing is you can [00:52:00] better touch will has a full Apple script and URL handler set up so you can create anything that better touch tool can do. You can integrate with things like a keyboard, Maestro, or bunch, and, uh, and tap into all of the kind of hardware integration that better touchable has from all kinds of other automation apps.
Christina:That’s awesome.
Brett:should probably link better touch will ever all that time. Yeah.
Christina:Yeah, I think so that we should definitely link better touch.
Brett:It’s available through a set app
Christina:I was going to say, yeah, it is. And it is one of those things. He also makes a great one, a manager called, um, a better, um, staff tool,
Brett:Yeah.
Christina:which I like a lot.
Brett:I’m a, I’m a moon guy. It’s better. Snap tool is great, but I’m, I’m um, I’m in the moon ecosystem. All of my, all of my window management is so moon based. I’ve never really had to, uh, chip play around with like magnet or better, better snap tool.
Christina:Yeah, I’ve [00:53:00] used mum as well. I’ve used a bunch of them. Um, that’s probably should be a topic at another point. We should talk about our window managers. Um, But like for that’s a super nerdy topic, but, uh, cause I’ve I’ve thoughts on them, but cause like tiling window managers are popular, but they’re not quite a thing on Mac.
Um,
Brett:X windows.
Christina:yeah.
Brett:We’re not going to talk about X windows.
Christina:No, we’re not gonna talk about what excellent is. I don’t care. Um, this is why I don’t use Lennox to be totally honest. Like I do not care. Could give a, could care less about whale under X windows or any yeah. Don’t care. But yeah. Um, the better touch tool is awesome and it, yeah, it is on, um, the, uh, uh, set up, but it’s great also.
So you have here a uhk model, so module, so this is for your ultimate hacking keyboard.
Brett:Okay, before we get to all of that, uh, I do want to mention that this episode is also brought to you by remote HQ, with remote HQ, your team [00:54:00] no longer needs a physical office to meet in remote HQ, empowers remote teams to work together as if they were in the same room. When you set up a meeting room, you can mix and match various apps on your screen to meet the needs of that particular meeting.
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And the meeting in the meeting rooms can be locked and used only by [00:55:00] authenticated users, which is more secure than just using a password. So head to remote hq.co/overtired for a 30 day free trial. When you’re ready to launch, use the code tired and get the next three months for free. Thank you. Remote HQ for your continued support of overtired.
Christina:Thank you. good stuff.
Brett:Yes. So Laszlo from better, uh, from ultimate hacking keyboard had contacted me and asked if I wanted to help beta test the version, two of the ultimate hack and keyboard.
Christina:Yeah. And you were like,
Brett:Yeah, absolutely. Um, so that hasn’t shown up yet. Uh, it is, he does, he has verified that it’s going to ship as soon as it’s ready, but in the meantime, he shipped me all of the modules that everyone has been waiting for years for these to ship.
Um, like they, he sends out updates about every month kind of like on the progress, the [00:56:00] sourcing and the, the. Uh, production of these and all the problems they’ve run into how they sell them. He’s very transparent about the process, but the fact of the matter is people paid for them upfront, like multiple years ago.
I don’t even know how many years. Uh, and nobody’s had them yet, but I got them. I have, I have the, the left-hand it gives you three extra keys by your thumb. And on the right hand, you can have a track point, a track pad or a track ball. And I have them all to test out. I’ll admit that moving my mouse with my thumb is.
I’m ju I’m not finding it to be so handy that I’ve broken the habit of just moving my hand over to my magic track pet, but the key module, the key cluster I could, I could definitely stand to have that arm, both thumbs.
Christina:That’s awesome.
Brett:I do. [00:57:00] So the, if it’s not configurable yet, like the, the agent that lets you configure all the keys of the keyboard.
Doesn’t yet let you customize the, the mouse modules, but if it did, I would, I would like to try turning, like maybe the track ball or even the, the track, any of them turning the men into scroll only so that while I’m writing or reading, I have a thumb module that can just scroll the page that I
Christina:Oh, that would be nice. So, so literally, so the only thing you could do would be to scroll, like you couldn’t use it for any other sort of pointing, um, activate, just scrolling,
Brett:They, they lack, um, currently he’s working on this, but they lack acceleration. So you start moving it with your thumb and you want to get across the screen and you just kinda have to sit and wait for it to get there. And then when it does your thumbs, my thumb isn’t accurate enough to like get it to stop [00:58:00] right.
Where I want it to. So then I spent a lot of time like fiddling to get the mouse cursor where I want it. So that’s not. To me a usable, but I do think that if he adds acceleration and when you move slower, you have finer control. I think they have potential.
Christina:And, um, what was I going to say? So I’m looking here at your list too, so that’s nice. So you have those modules, so that’s good. Um, what other stuff have you been.
Brett:bunch. I had been spending so much time on bunch. I did have, I had a chat with Fletcher yesterday about NBA ultra progress. Uh that’s they were good. Like it’s happening. Uh, we have a couple, we have a couple bugs that are only affecting like three out of over a thousand beta testers. But they’re they’re, um, they bother Fletcher enough that he, we can’t move forward with [00:59:00] release until we solve these bugs.
So they’re edge cases, but, but that’s where development of that is that. So in the meantime, I have been working on bunch and I’m really thinking about taking it commercial.
Christina:I think you should.
Brett:The it, I put out a beta release with all of these changes. Um, everything from like parallel X. When was the last time we talked about bunch?
Christina:We talked about it a couple of weeks ago, but we didn’t get super in depth with it. So.
Brett:I talk about front matter? Because the beta of bunch, the first version, it, we use front matter, which is like a term from, uh, like Jekyll blogging, where you have Yammel data at the top of your markdown file. So bunch can use Yammel style, uh, header data to do things like schedule, uh, opening and closing.
And it can, uh, you can say you can [01:00:00] have a. Close after. So if you open a bunch, it can automatically close the bunch after a set period of time, all with natural language. Um,
Christina:th th this was how you wound up, like not recording stuff, right? When, when bunch. messed up and,
Brett:When I was still testing. Yeah. Yes. I have had a couple of, a couple of bunches that I forgot to take a, a schedule key out of that I’d been testing that have suddenly. Launched or quit, uh, inappropriately, but that was my own fault.
Christina:speaking of updates real quickly, have you seen the new Mac? Updater.
Brett:no.
Christina:So McAfee or 2.0, came out, um, a couple of weeks ago, I paid for it, uh, because I, I really like it. And the interface is, has received kind of an uptick and it has some other, um, newer features too. Um, and he had added, you know, a, um, a [01:01:00] CLI for me, which I definitely appreciated.
And I think that that’s got some new, uh, features to you. I’m going to add that, um,
Brett:So.
Christina:In the list.
Brett:me, like, I, I, I own the previous version of Mac update or it’s solid. Um, if anyone doesn’t know, it basically goes through all of the sparkle feeds on all of your apps and
Christina:Right. But also get hub.
Brett:does it?
Christina:Yeah, it goes through, it goes through brew. Uh, it goes through, you know, get, have like anything that’s kind of linked to their, like they have a system like it it’s, um, integrated with, with, uh, Homebrew, which is one of the reasons I’ve liked it.
Brett:sure. Okay. That makes sense. I tend to put off my Homebrew updates until, until they become massive. And then half a day gets spent updating a home brewer.
Christina:No totally. Well, what’s nice about it is that they’ll do it for your casks and casks and brew. Parlance is like your, your binary apps. So not like your utilities, but, um, like your actual applications, if you’ve been sold them that way. And [01:02:00] so it can, it can check them that way. Yeah. So it was really nice and, and there is a CLI if you want to run stuff that way you can ignore stuff.
Like, like I have things set up, like to ignore like setup apps. Um, and, and stuff like that, or, or like, it’ll show you on a Mac app store app, and lets you like launch that. Um, it’ll show you like if there, if you need to do an upgrade or an update, if it will show you if something needs to be manually upgraded or not like it it’s good stuff
Brett:nice Mac update the website. Uh, which has kind of fallen out of a Vogue, but they used to have their own desktop app that did a pretty
Christina:they did it did. And. It, it did. And, and then it ended up, I think, at least in my experience, it consumed a lot of resources, but the bear thing was like cost a lot of money. Um, and I was actually how I found Mac updater because there hadn’t been really any updates on Mac update in a while. Like the database was still updated, but like the rest of the stuff, I was like, [01:03:00] I don’t.
Are they doing okay? Like they hadn’t been active on their blogs, their deals, like there’s just stuff. And I’m like, you know, I get the sense that things weren’t doing super well and which is a shame, but I was like, okay. And then I found Mac update and I was like, Oh, um, I like this. And, um, you know, it’s like, you know, 35 bucks or whatever.
Um, if you want the prohibition, it’s $15 for the single. Um, use, um, if you just want to use it as a scanner at spree, I like it a lot. Uh he’s he’s been very good on his, you know, uh, feature support. And like I said, adding the CLI thing was not even something I expected. And that was really nice.
Brett:what is the, what’s the benefit of the CLI over just using like brew update.
Christina:because you can do it for everything. So like brew update would obviously be great for anything I install through brew, but any of my other apps. I can just so I can just from the command line, initiate and update.
Brett:For a lot of things I like to [01:04:00] do from the command line, but I would want my, uh, mass updates of my computer to have more interactivity. And that gets to be a pain on the command line. So I personally would like the gooey for that.
Christina:Yeah, I know. And that’s the thing you can do both. Right. So, and it was, for me, it was just one of those things. I was like, sometimes I just want it, like, not that I replaced it. I used the goofy, most cases. I just wanted it. I just like, as a nice option. I didn’t expect that to actually be, you know, a, uh, thing that would be added into it.
Um, but that was, that was added in, in the last, uh, Six months ago, I think. But, um, yeah, so, so the 2.0 is out now. Um, it’s nice. Um, it’s, it’s a one-time purchase, so he’s not doing subscriptions. Um, I don’t know how frequently he’s planning on adding stuff, but had been a couple of years since he released the first Mac update, which is still getting, like, if you had the Mac update or like, that’ll still get, you know, a certain, you know, like [01:05:00] updates on when it’ll still work.
It’s just not gonna get any of the new features. But, uh, but, but I, um, I upgraded. I like supporting devs. He also makes like the, a couple of other utilities, like the, like, I think I might’ve heard of him first was the uninstalled, PKG, um, utility that he had, um, which, which is free. And, um, anyway, so yeah, that’s just kind of an update on that.
Uh, I was looking through your list too. We are running out of time. We’ve gone over, but, uh, Unite, uh, coherence acts and you’re missing fluid. I miss fluid as well. I really do those. Those apps are well, I kind of have to use in its place, but
Brett:like, I like unite and coherence. They
Christina:I used to
Brett:there. They’re solid apps. And the difference between them is one is. Uh, chromium based and one is a WebKit and, uh, unite makes nice small, fast [01:06:00] apps. Coherence lets you in let you include like your, uh, Chrome plugin and in a single-site browser and both of them.
Christina:Yep. I probably should have started with this. That’s what this really is, is this is a way to create seagull sized browsers, which are similar, but not the same as progressive web apps. So if you want just like, um, a window, you know, for, for a web interface thing, like if you want, you know, Gmail or whatever with no Chrome, that’s
Brett:that you can isolate from tracking. Like if you want to completely partition off your Facebook browsing, uh, it’s a way to, to isolate and not share Facebook with your other web browsing, uh, which you can also do with like Firefox containers or incognito mode and stuff like that. But it is nice.
And the cool thing about a single-site browser is I can have like a Facebook browser. That I can have a bunch that opens and closes social media apps. So I can have all my social media apps close [01:07:00] after an hour, you know, and, and I can control them separately. Uh, it makes it, it gives me added control over my social media habits, but, um, I do miss fluid user scripts.
Christina:Yeah, that’s what I loved about it.
Brett:Yeah. I use our scripts. Aren’t really a thing anymore. Are they.
Christina:No, not really, but, but it was nice. And so like, if you had a grease monkey script or something like this was really useful for things like Gmail or for other stuff, I used to have one that I used for notifications and this was back when, uh, growl was a thing. I used to have a Trello fluid app that I had for years where I had a user script set up that would give me ground notifications when a card was changed and, um, Trello did eventually release a desktop app.
My SSP with fluid was better. Uh, I don’t know if that’s still the case cause I don’t use Trello anymore. And I think they’ve changed owners like one or two times since then. But, um, that, that, but my setup that I’d use for [01:08:00] years was better than their desktop app to be totally honest, because I had like the user scripting set up and I had like it, you know, with the, with the ground notifications.
Um, and, and I also had, you know, like, um, I guess what, what’s the thing like badges, like to show unread stuff or whatever. So, yeah. Yeah. User scripts aren’t really a thing anymore, but I did, I did like fluid a lot and, and, uh, Todd is really a really nice guy. Um,
Brett:ditching Dorf. That’s right. Whatever happened to him.
Christina:I don’t know.
Brett:is he doing now? Didn’t he put out like a diagrams app to
Christina:He might have,
Brett:a shape. I think it was called shapes.
Christina:yeah, that’s right. Shapes app. Yeah.
Brett:Who did, uh, who, who did wait, who did retro batch? What’s that? Oh, now I forgotten. Um, have you seen retro batch?
Christina:The name is really familiar.
Brett:Um, it’s uh, like, um, Oh
Christina:Oh no. Okay. Well, yeah, that’s good. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Rusher. Bashi I know this. Yeah. [01:09:00] Retro bashes. Awesome. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Brett:Aye. Aye. Aye. I think he finally put out a stable release. I’ve been on it since the beta. It’s a wave. It’s a node based a way to map out image manipulation automation. So you get like this page, this blank page, and you can drag nodes onto it and connect them in different ways and have them branch off.
And it basically creates a pipeline. So. Like for me, I, I have a template that creates a, uh, a header image, four, one of my blog posts at a certain size. Then I drop it into retro batch. It creates the, uh, Twitter, Facebook, uh, two X and one X versions. It creates the, um, all the open graph tags and it basically, I can drag one image onto it and get a full.
Like ready to go open graph, blog posts out of it. And I love retro badge.
Christina:Yeah, no, I like it too. Um, and I love acorn. [01:10:00] Like acorn is one of my favorite apps.
Brett:Gus is good. Um, like, so affinity apps have replaced acorn for me, acorn. Like there was a point in my life where I couldn’t get along without Photoshop. Like I ran an ad agency. I was steeped in the. The, the professional graphic design world and, uh, Photoshop and illustrator, you couldn’t work without.
Um, but then once I kind of moved away from that was doing mostly my own work acorn you could launch and, and export a JPEG and acorn, and the time it took Photoshop to finish bouncing in the doc. And so I use acorn all the time. Affinity is not as fast as acorn by any means.
Christina:No. I mean, look for serious editing. I use affinity for everything too. I mean, although I do still have like a Photoshop, uh, thing that work pays for, and that I use for work purposes and because you need it sometimes, [01:11:00] but, um, and like you get the creative suite. So like, if I need, you know, we edit in premiere, so might as well get all of it.
But if I’m doing quick editing, I still use acorn just cause it’s so much faster.
Brett:Yup. Corn. I’m adding a corn in retro batch to the show notes. have good show notes. There’s
Christina:We do have good show notes,
Brett:Spears. Um,
Christina:but the both of Vanessa gregarious, like article was really good from 2008. It’s really a good read in context now, I think anyway,
Brett:we should probably stop now, but I do want to, I don’t have a long discussion to have about this, so I’ll just mention you ever use HomeBridge.
Christina:uh, no,
Brett:Uh, so.
Christina:this, this, this was the thing, like, that’ll like be your home kit bridge with the other stuff.
Brett:it lets all my home kit devices show up on my Alexa and it lets all my Indigo devices show up on HomeBridge and uh, I mean on home kit so I can, I can control my old fashioned Indigo [01:12:00] automation from the home app. And it used to be this like node application. You had to run from the command line and run.
Uh, Damon in the background and it was, uh, you had to be a nerd to use it. Um, now it’s still a node application, but it has this whole web interface with status updates and you can install plugins, uh, through a web, uh, uh, like there’s a Oh a plugin installer. And in the case of the newer plugins, you don’t even have to edit the Jason config file.
It’s super nice. Now. I let it go for a while. I had, I had just given up on integrating all of my home automation stuff, but I’m back to it and I’m loving HomeBridge.
Christina:Nice. And this
Brett:a few things off my list.
Christina:we can, we can. And so, yeah, so this is, uh, HomeBridge. This is, uh, the Northern [01:13:00] man, 54 HomeBridge Alexa.
Brett:Are you just looking stuff up on the web?
Christina:I was trying to, I was trying to find like, what were the main like project is for HomeBridge.
Brett:I it’ll be in my recent, my recent, Oh man. That’s funny in my, uh, my browser history. All of my HomeBridge links are, uh, yeah, my, from my local, um, Mac mini. Yeah. It’s um, they have a good hub. There’s a HomeBridge user forget hubs. So if you go to HomeBridge slash HomeBridge. Yeah, cool stuff. Cool stuff.
You can run it on a raspberry PI
Christina:Excellent. Excellent. I don’t do any of the home automation stuff, but I sometimes think about it. So if I ever do, I’m always like, yep. That’s what I would use. I would use home bridge because trying to get everything on one platform or another is a nightmare. So
Brett:you know what you can automate
Christina:what was that?
[01:14:00] Brett:bedtime.
Christina:Ooh, good call. Good call. All right.
So I think, I think it’s, uh, it’s time for us to try to get some sleep. Hopefully you can get your full eight, eight and a half hours,
Brett:let’s go for eight and a half.
Christina:eight and a half. I like it. That’s what she said.
Brett:That’s at least a half inch more than I have
Christina:All right. Get some sleep, Brett.
Brett:get some sleep, Christina.

Feb 3, 2021 • 1h 4min
225: The Stock Market and You
From mainframe memories to Gamestop, with some good ol’ cancel culture in the middle. Christina knows as much about money as she does about 90210.
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Transcript
Christina
[00:00:00] Christina:You’re listening to overtired. I’m Christina Warren here with Brett Terpstra. Brett, how are you?
Brett:I am. I’m good. I’m good. My, my, like, like a cycle of like, uh, having a manic episode a week seems to be, I think I’m in the clear, I think I’m good. How are you?
Christina:Okay, so we’re going to do Christina’s health corner of this week. Um,
Brett:We never do. Christina’s health corner.
Christina:we don’t and yet, yeah, so I take, um, an antidepressant called, uh, Trintellix and I take, I’m supposed to take a dose like at night. And, and the reason I take it at night, instead of in the morning with my other pills is because like, it’s sometimes can like upset my stomach or something.
And it’s just, it’s a weird thing. So I take it at night. Well, I miscalculated and I. Ran out of doses. And I realized this [00:01:00] yesterday at like 10:00 PM. Um, so I’ll, I’ll pick up my prescription today, but I didn’t take it last night. And as a result, even though the half-life on it, isn’t super bad. It’s not like effects are aware if you miss a dose, like you immediately feel like withdrawal symptoms, like instantly like a, I had really weird.
Dreams and kind of like fitful dreams, meaning that like seven or nine minutes would seem like way longer than it normally is. And this has happened before when I forgot to take it to us for whatever reason. So like really weird dreams, kind of uneven sleep. And I’m just feeling, I’m going to be honest with the listeners and with you, I’m just feeling kind of, not completely with it.
Brett:yeah, I’m on, I’m on, um, uh, not Abilify. Uh, Lamictal is like, I get [00:02:00] withdrawal from that. It’s a mood stabilizer. And if I miss a dose of that, uh, not only do I get all like skin Crawley and like this weird physical, anxious feeling, uh, I also get that. Not quite with it feeling
Christina:Yeah, this is, yeah, this is weird. Cause it’s not, like I said, it’s not like a normal sort of withdrawal feeling. I mean, like, it is a withdrawal of sorts, but it’s not like a normal sort of that, like it, I don’t have the, the skin Crawley. I don’t have like the feeling like I’m going insane kind of thing.
Like I do with, um, like if I miss like an effects or dose or something, Um, affects her is really bad. Um, if you miss, like the half-life on that is so short, that it’s bad. Um, I once had to, um, an ex-boyfriend in college once contacted me because his new girlfriend, I guess, had been staying with him and, um, like left her pills, like at our [00:03:00] house, I guess, like she lived in like South Carolina or something and she was like, Going crazy because she was off her meds and was like, withdrawing, like crazy.
So he like reached out to me because he was freaking out. So she like came over and she was like, can I like, you know, I had to like find out her dose. And I was like, how many pills do you need? And she was like, I just needed one. I was like, no, how many do you actually need? Because it was one of those things where like our breakup was not great.
And it was still one of those things where I was like, yeah, I don’t want to wish this on anyone. So. For his sake and her sake, I was like, here, I will, I will give you a couple of pills. Um, so it’s not like that, but I am like totally kind of all over the place and yeah, the, the sleep thing. Is like the weirdest part because, um, a like took me forever to go to sleep.
And then once I finally did, I was just in like, these really like fitful, but like intense kind of REM cycles where [00:04:00] my alarm would go off and, you know, I’d hit the snooze and like, I’d have like nine minutes of seemingly actual sleep, but like I’d have dreams and stuff, which almost never in that period of time.
Uh, and then like, you know, waking up and just being like, feeling just disoriented. So that’s, that’s that’s me. Um, also I was just then talking about sleep. So that’s maybe a good segue for some stuff you want to talk about too early. Okay.
Brett:too early sponsors have to come between 30 and 70% marks in the show, unless this is going to be a really short show. How you feeling?
Christina:I’m feeling. I know it’s not there. Okay. So, all right. So see, this is, this is showing how bad, like I am at, like, I was trying to do the whole, um,
Brett:It was a Valiant
Christina:thing. I’m sorry. I was trying, but yeah, so I’m feeling weird to be totally honest, but other than that, like my health corner is okay. I guess. Um, Grant’s been having some major health issues, but this is not Grant’s health corner.
This is Christina and bread’s health corner. So.
[00:05:00] Brett:So here’s my, my drug slash sleep thing I used to take, uh, I think they’re called Z class, like Lunesta, um, sleeping meds. And, uh, what’s the one that, uh, like politicians always get in trouble for. Ambien. I used to take both, not at the same time, but I’ve been on both of those. And I, uh, I, it affected my memory to the extent that like, I would forget things within five minutes.
And as soon as I stopped taking those, like I could, I could think again, but I couldn’t sleep. So they put me on transit don’t uh, and then there was. Something else that I was on. But anyway, long story short, I can no longer sleep without drugs. Fortunately, one of the, uh, bipolar medications that I take is called, um, it’s a weird saffras and no one, no [00:06:00] one seemed to have ever heard of it, but it’s
Christina:yeah, I was going to say, I’ve never heard about that one.
Brett:like it dissolves under your tongue. You put these
Christina:Oh, one of those. Yeah.
Brett:under your tongue and it dissolves and it will knock you out. So I don’t have to take any other sleep meds now, but if I run out of those, there’s no way I’m sleeping that night. It’s like you described with just like the fitful in and out half, half asleep, half awake.
It, it sucks.
Christina:Yeah, no, that’s unfortunate. Although I’m glad like you have something that can get you to sleep. Yeah. I’ve um, I used to take NyQuil until I kind of like, uh, and my doctors even used to like recommend it. And then I kind of like became immune to NyQuil, which was unfortunate. Um, grant used to take Ambien.
And when he was on Ambien, he would have, you know, some people will do the things where they have like sleepwalking and sleep, eating and whatnot. He would have a thing where he would just like buy really weird stuff.
Brett:You go into this like weird blackout [00:07:00] mode that can involve hallucinations and you you’re super lucid and you feel like you’re making all the right decisions. Uh, but you absolutely aren’t. So I get that I’ve been there. My, uh, my ex wife used to take Ambien as well. And, uh, yeah, we had some very interesting conversations, post taking an Ambien.
Christina:Yeah. Yeah, no, I I’ve never really taken it. I think for that reason. Cause I was always like, yeah, I don’t know about that. Cause yeah. Cause grant would have a thing where yeah, I remember one time he got, he bought like a bunch of like G4 Aero, G three era, really like, um, Mack towers
Brett:a punch, huh?
Christina:like three of them
Brett:Like wildlife while they were popular or like, while they were recurrent
Christina:no, this was no, this wasn’t like.
No, this was like in 2009, but [00:08:00] they’re in my parents’ basement now. And it’s like, they were like that the Sawtooth Aero ones. And, um, and one of them was like the, the, the G three that had, um, like the iMac colored kind of, uh, um, uh, front, which was similar to the Saatchi to design. But just like it was, it was the Aqua Marine color rather than the, uh, darker blue,
Brett:I remember it,
Christina:the Bondai color.
Yeah,
Brett:like the, that was the first Mac I actually worked on. I had that at my, uh, my first job out of college. It was, uh, a G three, I think. But it
Christina:It was.
Brett:Marine. Yeah.
Christina:Yeah, they’re a nice machine. So he bought like couple of those. I think one point you also had like, got like a 19 inch monitor, which CRT, which we got rid of that when we moved, because that was dumb even then. And it was like, this was when nobody wanted a CRT, but I think that it was one of those deals where like he had to get the CRT in order to, uh, get the computer.
And then he got like some sort of like weird [00:09:00] terminal, um, I guess emulator, like, uh, things like, like a weird, I guess, like terminal systems that had really bizarre, um, input methods, like implant mechanisms that you couldn’t even use with anything else. It wasn’t even like a VTE or whatever. Like, it was just, it was something bizarre that like, I think in his mind, he thought he could do something with it and he couldn’t.
And, um, and for years he tried to defend. That purchase. And then he finally like came and was like, no, that was like, there was, there was, that was the most bizarre, weirdest, like dumbest thing. I was like, thank you. It only took you like five years to come to terms with that. Uh, I mean, not that I cared, you know, or whatever, it was just one of those like funny things.
I think he might’ve bought a spark box for some reason.
Brett:can’t remember what a sparked boxes.
Christina:Those were those sun boxes that were like shaped like pizza boxes. They were often known. They like that. Like the sun, like pizza boxes, like the, the big, you know, kind of like server things that, um, before Lennox was when everyone used was like, what nerves, [00:10:00] I guess, in the, in the mid nineties, all lusted after. Cause it was like it’s Unix, but I can, I can have it on my desk.
Brett:wait, what was that line from? I think it was Jurassic park.
Christina:Yeah,
Brett:is Unix. I know this.
Christina:yes, yes, yes. Which is such a club it’s like line, uh, and which, you know, like obviously became a meme, um, within like five years, you know, or whatever, like what monks nerds, maybe even earlier, I became aware of it within five years and like knew the context, but the movie came out in 93 and that actress was probably like 12 years old.
Like the fact that they would write that in there. I wonder if that was a like requirement for them being able to use all of that, like, you know, risk stuff that they were doing for like the SGI stuff that they were doing for the graphics that they had to, you know, like name, check Unix. I don’t know. [00:11:00] Cause it’s such a weird choice to be like, it’s Unix. I know this. It’s like, I, I know that they like established, I believe that she was some sort of like very technical, like computer thing, which in retrospect, like, I appreciate that it was the, the, the girl child that had that skill and not the little boy, but totally, but I it’s also like it’s 1993, the only people who have access to Unix are like academics.
Or very, very, very rich, you know, people, um, if you’re not working in like a day job and something like this is not something where like I could imagine you would come home and you’d be like, yeah, we just have a Unix box at home. Like that. That’s literally the whole reason we have Linux.
Brett:teen 94, the guitarist in my band, his older brother got a, um, [00:12:00] What was it? What, what, what was Steve jobs doing when he left Apple next? He got her next box that, uh, he, I don’t remember what, uh, the base OSPF next to us was, but yeah, that makes sense. That makes perfect sense. But he had hacked it to as like a Linux box and it was fun, but I, I, I got my, uh, Linux chops.
Uh, or Unix chops by logging into the mainframe back when they were called mainframes at the local college. And, uh, like you could, it was gopher was how I got into it, but then I had to learn my way around a command line. And I had my own little Tilda. Uh, I think my username was Ali Smith. I don’t remember why, but like Tilda Ali Smith.
And you had your, like your personal webpage and everything at that, these were good memories. It was [00:13:00] why I first built a Linux machine was because I had so much fun learning Unix. On the mainframe, the ASMR 400, I think that’s what it was. That’s a machine, right? An ASMR 400.
Christina:I think so.
Brett:Yeah. It’s all, it’s all distant memories.
There was a lot of heroin between that or no,
Christina:Yeah, no, that that’s that’s that that’s so funny. Well, it was funny. You mentioned, you mentioned like gopher because I remember having to get onto my sister’s. Like she went to the university of Georgia and I remember having to use like a gopher client or maybe it was like something called, like Kermit or something.
I’m trying to remember now.
Brett:right. That was current. It was a protocol.
Christina:Okay. Okay.
Brett:was a modem protocol.
Christina:Oh, okay. All right. Well, I remember using gofer and Kermit to have to get on, uh, cause we had like a, a laptop. We didn’t have our desktop. Then we had like a laptop and I bought an external modem [00:14:00] for it because I was that child. And um, this is when I was like 12 and a loving or 12 and I, um, Because it might’ve been even before she started college that we first had to do it.
I don’t remember. And having to like, do that ticket on the course catalog so that she could register for classes. I remember that. I also remember, I mean, it was, it’s funny because, um, she didn’t go to college with a, with a computer and it wasn’t because she couldn’t have. I mean, we didn’t have a lot of money then, but you know, we, my parents would have figured something out.
It wasn’t because like, you know, uh, she couldn’t have, or whatever, it was just, it wasn’t a requirement. So she, you know, didn’t have a computer at college. Like she would go to the labs. And then eventually when we got our Pentium 90, uh, which was like my first real. Real computer that I was obsessed with and it, you know, [00:15:00] helps pay for and all kinds of other things that really kind of kick-started me into computing.
Um, because I, I, at this point I’d already read and was like pseudo expert, at least in theory about how. You know, computers worked and use and was, uh, uh, uh, uh, like a defacto CIS admin in the Mac lab, uh, at school. But like, um, she will come home and, and use that, uh, or, or more correctly, like she’d come home and like, I would, you know, do stuff, um, for her, but yeah, but it’s so funny to think about, like, I always think about that, but like, for me, there was no question, like, You had to have a computer like to go in college, like, you know, like w wasn’t it, I think like, and it, to me, like, I actually got a really, really nice computer for Christmas when I was, uh, 15 or 16.
And like two years later, when I went away to college, I got, um, And even nicer, you know, computer that, that I like took [00:16:00] with me and that I paid for part of it, this, when I worked at best buy. And I, um, so I did like, I, I could have taken the computer that I got a couple of years earlier with me, but I, I did not, I was like, no, I’m going to get like, you know, brand new thing or whatever.
And, and I made friends with people the first week in the dorms because a lot of people didn’t have either Netscape, um, uh, cards and their computers because they bought cheap like III machines. And then realize that they couldn’t get on the networks and didn’t know how to install a PCI card. So I just like went to best buy and bought like a whole stack of them.
And then we just kind of go to the dormer dorm and install people’s PCIE cards. Like it’s no people,
Brett:a price. You’re doing this for free. Oh, that’s crazy.
Christina:I know. I know. I mean, I made them pay for the card, but, uh, it was like the first week of school, you know, you’re trying to get to know people. I did charge for HBO when we got HBO. Um, and, and want to making money.
Um, so is how it worked is that we got basic cable for [00:17:00] free, but if you wanted to get HBO together channels, like I had to call Comcast and I had to like, get a package specifically added on to my unit. And it was not an easy process because like the way that our dorms worked as they were like, they were like apartments.
And so it was not an easy process for me to call them and figure out a way for me to just. You know, upgrade that part of the package because the rest of it was, was paid for, and only to be built for the HBO and Showtime. Um, and, and then pay for the cable boxes. Uh, th the would, you know, offer the stuff.
So like I had one in my room and then one in the living room. And then, um, we would have like group watch parties for sex and the city and the Sopranos and queer spoken stuff. And so people would come over and would watch, and I would like say, Hey, can you ship in some money for the cable bill? And. And I didn’t make a lot of money or anything, but I did make a little bit of money off of that.
So.
Brett:when I was in college, I lived in this, [00:18:00] uh, I guess you would call it a punk house. It was, it was mostly junkies, but not entirely junkies, but we, uh, we pulled the cable. We, we tapped into the neighbor’s cable line. Ran it up the utility pole across, down the other utility pole and into our house.
And then it was, I don’t remember how exactly it worked, but basically premium channels were just filtered.
Christina:Yep. Yep. It was exactly how it worked.
Brett:if you unfiltered it, you got everything.
Christina:Right. They’re scrambled. They were called scramblers. Yep.
Brett:Yeah. And we managed, we had like full cable, totally free. Those are good times, by the way. You’re right. Kermit is a computer file transfer management reading from Wikipedia protocol and the set of communication software tools primarily used in the early years of personal computing and the 1980s [00:19:00] old school.
Christina:Old school. So, so UGA was like really, really backwards then, because I remember that, but I also remember using gofer or whatever emergency. I just remember having to set up the IRQ settings and trying to get connected because it was not an easy process. I mean, I I’ve lost so much of this time because it’s been 25 years, but, but I,
Brett:sound familiar, but I, yeah,
Christina:right.
Yeah. It’s, it’s, it’s been 25 years, but I just remember being like 11 or 12 and like being like. All right. How am I going to all right. Get, get this to work, get the course, catalog up, get the other stuff. And then, you know, I’ve got like my older sister, who’s impatient and kind of bitchy and, and thinking that she knows everything and I’m like, okay, well then you do it.
And then she has no idea what she’s doing. And then she’s like, you know, yelling at my mom is, is high, strong and freaking out. We have to get this time that I had. I’m like, well then fucking leave me alone. You know, like, Like, like, let me, let me, you know, follow the instructions and figure out how to [00:20:00] do this.
Like, we did have Wikipedia and we didn’t have, I mean, we had like a 14, four modem, so, you know, it was hardly, um,
Brett:I wonder if they’re still go over servers. It used to be this wealth of what you would call like underground Infor I mean, bomb making materials like the anarchist cookbook. Like
Christina:Oh yeah.
Brett:everything
Christina:Oh, we used to spread that around a floppy disks in, in middle school.
Brett:terrorism, but yeah. I wonder if that stuff’s still out there.
Christina:Um, I did actually find the, the anarchist cookbook and, uh, a couple of years ago, I think I was going to write a story about it. And then I didn’t, because it, it turns out like if you find it, like there might be some stuff in there. That’s I mean, look, to be very clear, like it is total homegrown terrorism sort of shit or whatever, but like most of the stuff it would not work and most of it is just complete
Brett:for an H-bomb in there that I’m 90% sure wouldn’t work.
Christina:There was a disc bomb. I remember there was a floppy disc bomb and, uh, [00:21:00] the, the, the idea was that it would destroy the hard drive in your computer or whatever. And I remember in seventh grade, Some of my friends, I didn’t actively participate, but I didn’t actively not participate. Right. That’s that’s I was gonna say, like, I didn’t actively try to build like the disk bomb, but I didn’t actively not like I was definitely watching, like, the idea was basically you just like open, open it up or acetone on some of the things.
Um, and, and replace a couple of the other things with some match system, like, um, basically replaced the inside with, um, matches and, um, like mashed powder. And, um, acetone. And then the idea was that the Reed heads would create friction, which would, you know, uh, spark the mash powder and, and, you know, combusted with the acetone and then burn the insights.
It did not do any of that. Like, and, and, and when you,
Brett:really just creative storytelling.
Christina:100%, 100%, but we were also excited and then like nothing happened. It was one of those things. It was like, [00:22:00] You know, cause, cause even then components were strong enough that it’s like, you would need a whole lot more like friction or whatever to do anything.
Assuming you even were able to spread stuff correctly. I don’t even, I don’t even think that it would be theoretically possible for it to do what it was doing, but it was creative storytelling. And you know, when you’re. Like 12, like that’s what you kind of think about as being like, you hear about something like the anarchist cookbook and you’re like, Oh yeah, this is, this is bad.
And this is, you know, I’m, I’m being so subversive and I’m so, you know, whatever it is, it’s like, it’s like, uh, telling dead baby jokes or listening to Marilyn Manson. It’s just one of those things that you do when you’re like that age, because it feels, yeah.
Brett:Nice segue. Um, for anyone, for anyone looking, I am linking a PDF with every page of the anarchist cookbook scanned it’s available on docs dot, google.com, who fun. Um, yeah, so there’s, there’s this news that really [00:23:00] shouldn’t be surprising to anyone, uh, that Marilyn Manson is being accused by multiple women of abuse.
Christina:it’s pretty sharable.
Brett:yeah, like I’ve always had a, uh, kind of a skeptical appreciation for some of his music, like his, his later his stuff more recently, I’ve actually really enjoyed, uh, third day of a seven day binge or whatever that song was like the soundtrack from, uh, John wick. Look, I liked that stuff. It was cool, but.
Like he’s always been creepy and I’ve never really appreciated the shock value of his kind of Hertz persona. So this isn’t, yeah, I’m not shocked.
Christina:No, no, I’m not shocked. And Evan, Rachel Wood, who is one of the people who’s like publicly finally named him, we all knew that it was him because she testified and in front of Congress, I think it was a couple of years ago and it went viral again. Last year. Um, [00:24:00] I’m not, I don’t really remember why, but her testimony went viral again.
And it’s really powerful where she talks about how she’d basically been groomed as a teenager, by someone who was twice her age and to, uh, you know, she described the abuse and it’s pretty horrific. Um, I’m not going to get into what some of the specific allegations are because we don’t need people to, to know that or like look at, you know, like if you want to do that to yourself, look into it, but it’s pretty, it’s pretty terrible, but based on the descriptions and everything, based on the fact that we all watched.
Them together, which was weird as hell, right? Like he’s literally was twice her age. I think they got together when she was still married. He was still married, I think, to two deed of on trees. And he got together with Evan, Rachel Wood. I don’t even think she was 18 yet, honestly, when they started. And then,
Brett:she was 19. He was 38.
Christina:well, that’s what they’re saying.
I’m saying, I think if you actually look into when they were
Brett:public record.
Christina:Right. I think if you look into some of the other things, I think it might’ve been earlier because data on trees talked about how, like, part of the reason they got divorced was that she didn’t like that there was this [00:25:00] other girl around and, and that she was just supposed to accept that.
And like, if you do that, Not like maybe there was another girl, but it, it seems unlikely. Um, but also the weird thing was is that like her whole look changed. Like she dyed her hair black. She started dressing like B2. Uh like, she was very clearly like from the outside, it was one of those things where, because she was, you know, a, a child star in retrospect, I actually think the way the media treated her in this was not that long ago.
This is really a little more than a decade ago was kind of fucked up because it was kind of like, Almost a making fun of thing. Like, Oh, he’s people were basically calling out like, look at how creepy this is, is basically what the headline was. Right. Like that was basically what, like the gossip media, like celebrity media kind of angle was, which was, Oh yeah.
It’s, it’s very clear that like he’s. You know, making all of his girlfriends look a certain way and that, [00:26:00] you know, he has some sort of control over them. And, and isn’t this weird that this guy is twice her age, but nobody bothered to really kind of be critical of it and be like, wait a minute. What is, what is a guy like this doing with this young girl?
Like, why are we just turning this into like fodder when really we should all be deeply concerned and freaked out that, you know, like he’s. Clearly manipulating her and doing some other stuff. And so she’d already been public about the fact that she’d been abused, but she named him this week and, um, other people came forward to CAA, dropped him his record label, dropped him, um, He has been cut from episodes of some star show.
He’s cut from a future episode of, uh, I think like one of the Ryan Murphy shows like, uh, American horror story or whatever, think that something else he did for someone else has been cut. Like basically he is he’s being swiftly canceled and I’m not opposed to that, [00:27:00] but I do kind of wonder, like, why did it take this long?
Because again, we all knew like she didn’t name his name, but we all knew it was him. When she talked about this, like two years ago, and people have said it the years, some stuff about him, like he, and he said, we’re support her. Like he talked about how he’d like, fantasize about like smashing her in the head with a sledgehammer and stuff.
Right. And people just kind of rolled their eyes. Oh, that just, just that though, that crazy Maryland, that crazy Brian, he’s just being performatively weird. You know, it’s like at a certain point, you know, that. Performative shtick. I don’t know, like it was this sort of thing that was edgy and, and felt risque and taboo to me as like a 13 year old.
And then as an adult, like a quarter century later, when the person is still doing the same shtick, you’re just like, okay, this, this no longer has, like, [00:28:00] why are people still buying into this? Like this isn’t even.
Brett:I think,
Christina:I don’t know.
Brett:labels have a lot of responsibility in this. As long as the labels continue promoting and continue putting up the music, even when they know better. People are it’s easy to, it’s easy to sweep that stuff under the rug because you assume, Oh, he’s got a new album out. No, if he was really a bad person,
Christina:Right.
Brett:the record labels wouldn’t be supporting him.
And especially like these days, it, I there’s a certain, as long as someone has commercial viability, it’s easy to
Christina:Oh, yeah. Oh, and that’s always what it comes down to. Right? Like to be clear his, his record label, those shows his agency. And I would say that his agency probably in his case probably has more culpability than even the record label, because it’s not like music is what makes people money now or whatever.
Right. He’s making more thing on continuing to be on TV shows and sell that persona. But it’s like, as soon [00:29:00] as they see that you’re not financially viable, then they’ll drop you. Um, this is as soon as it becomes too toxic for them to support, but as long as they feel like they can still make money out of it, like we’ve seen with every case of abuse or me too, or anything that’s come out.
Basically people we protected until it is like too toxic for them to, to not support. Right. But like, as, as, as long as there’s that monochrome of like, kind of hope, Oh, we can still make money off of this. There’s some sort of financial viability here, then it doesn’t matter. Which, um, is like a deeply cynical and kind of fucked up thing.
Um, but it’s weird though, like with him, actually, this is really fucked up. Like you say, like, we shouldn’t be surprise and we shouldn’t be, uh, although it doesn’t change the fact that it’s horrible, like what people have gone through and the fact that they’ve been clearly trying to tell us for years, like the re the Evan, Rachel Wood thing, like bothers me because she was.
So young. And like I said, the media [00:30:00] response was basically one of just kind of like pointing and gawking rather than being like, what the hell? Like, you know what I mean? Like, and, and, and not at all compare the situations cause they’re not the same and it’s, it’s different, but it’s kind of like the way that like Scott Disick, who I’m sure you don’t know who that is.
Brett:I don’t.
Christina:Uh, he is Courtney Kardashians ex-boyfriend and the father of her three children. So he’s part of the Kardashian clan, but he’s like my age, right. He’s like 37 and he keeps dating like 19 year old girls. And. He was with Sophia Richie. Who’s Lionel Richie’s youngest daughter for a couple of years after he and Courtney broke up and they got together when she was like 19.
And like, they would go on family vacations together and stuff. And it was weird because like, she, you know, is again like half his age. And, and again, like in that case, the definitely the media response has been more like this is gross, but has also been more like, kind of like this just kind of like pointing and staring thing.
And to be clear, like, [00:31:00] because those people always have cameras with them and he, I don’t think he’s ever exhibited behavior or had any sort of allegations against them or anything like is not the same thing. And I’m not trying to say that people who aren’t legally adults don’t have the right to be in relationships with whoever they want to be, because of course they do, but it does just kind of make me like question, like why, like we just kind of like point and stare when, you know, like the normal person response when you see those sorts of things, it’s usually like, okay, Is everything.
Okay. I mean, I think that’s a fair question to ask and maybe things are, but like, rather than just like treating it like an entertainment thing, you know? Um, but anyway, but in 2011, Marilyn Manson, I, because I looked into this last night where he did a coffee table book for one of his albums with fucking Shyla Boff, who is also like, uh, has been accused of, um, severe abuse.
Um, Oh, yeah,
Brett:was just really enjoying peanut butter Falcon. That [00:32:00] sucks.
Christina:yeah, no. Yeah. FKA twigs, like is suing him
Brett:To
Christina:like over abuse stuff. Yeah. Like, and, and, um, other people have come forward too, and he has done the. He’s he’s, he’s decided to go the route of basically like admitting that he’s a drug addict and alcoholic and all these things and has major issues, but has denied some of the other claims.
And like, so he’s like, all right, well, some of what you say is true, but not all of it, uh, which to me is anyway. Um, so the fact that, that he and Marilyn Manson created like a coffee table books together, it’s kind of fitting
Brett:That’s fucked up
Christina:it is fucked up.
Brett:the thing about a half year age, um, until you’re 60, that’s a horrible idea because people under 30 are rarely tolerable. Like I can’t imagine having a healthy relationship, uh, as someone over 40 with anyone. Like if I haven’t, I can’t [00:33:00] remember a 21 year old I’ve met and thought, you know, I could spend a lot of time with this person.
Christina:Right. You’re just in totally different phases of your life.
Brett:Yeah. Anytime you see, anytime you see a 38 year old with a 19 year old, you, you know, something drunk. That’s that’s, that’s never, that’s never the sign of someone who is truly, uh, invested in the, uh, the younger person. I just don’t think that’s possible.
Christina:Like I said, I think that there, there could be exceptions to everything, but I think in, in general, you’re correct. I mean, I think like, and I have, you know, friends who are younger and people who, you know, I, I enjoy being around. Maybe not like 21, but, um, although I am kind of mentoring someone, who’s a friend of mine’s daughter, who’s 21 and, and, or 22, I guess.
And I enjoy her very much, but yeah, it’s a different sort of thing. Right? Like, and, and I consider her, you know, we’re friends, but it’s also. Uh, a slightly different [00:34:00] relationship, even like five or six years ago. When I did have like interns who were like 10 years younger than me, um, I didn’t really feel a disconnect other than maybe like our professional statuses with them, but at the same time, you know, it was, it wasn’t like I wanted to date any of them.
Right. Like I just, yeah. I just feel like you’re, you’re in different, you’re in different places in your life. Um, yeah.
Brett:will admit there was, uh, a couple of years ago when I was still going to bars, there was an evening after a couple beers that I had a very intelligent, very, um, in a stimulating conversation with a 21 year old girl. And she was also clearly hitting on me. Uh, she was not attractive, but she was intellectually so interesting that I stuck with the conversation for probably an hour, which is crazy for me.
So yeah, I shouldn’t, I shouldn’t [00:35:00] generalize all 21 year olds are intolerable. That’s not true. Uh, just, yeah. Okay.
Christina:and I, I, I
Brett:there’s enough though.
Christina:Yeah. No. Well, I mean, I think it’s just a different life experience I go into and see if they’re intolerable. It’s just, you don’t, you don’t know what you don’t know. I mean, it’s one of those things. Like I only, like, at least for me, it’s only come with time where I’ve kind of realized I’ve looked back on those times in my life.
Cause you know, uh, I was like a very mature, like, um, like a high schooler. And then I felt like I regressed when I was in college because I actually act my age, but I still was frequently around people older than me. And it’s only been like, as I’ve actually gotten older, that I’ve realized, Oh yeah, I didn’t, I didn’t have any of the perspective or know any of the stuff, you know, I thought I, I thought I did at the time, but I, but I
Brett:that’s what makes it intolerable is so many 21 year olds think they ha think they’re worldly. Think they have the experience. Think they have the understanding that anyone 40 and up, or, you know, even, you know, 30 [00:36:00] and up. Can be like, no, you have a lot to learn. that’s that’s, that’s what grates on me, I guess, with most of those conversations.
Christina:Yeah, no, totally. And, uh, but, but I think they’re playing people who, especially, you know, with the. Age of the internet will not leak in really smart intellectual conversations. So yeah, it’s just that worldview stuff. It’s just, you don’t know. And like I said, there are always exceptions. I don’t want to make total generalizations, but it is, I don’t know for me like the, the Marilyn Manson thing, the creepy thing was like, he literally like her look changed, like.
She dyed her hair. She wore different makeup. She wore different types of clothing. Like she became a clone of his ex wife and it was, it was a very clearly like orchestrated thing by him. Right. Like, it didn’t seem to be of her own volition at all. It’s just like one day she shows up with him and then she’s looking like, you know, this clone of, of his ex-wife, who’s also like close to twice her age.
Like it just wasn’t. Okay. Um, [00:37:00] we’re going to have to have a real awkward segue in a second, but I was just going to say, I read his, I read his book or read part of his book. So he wrote like an autobiography or like co-wrote one or whatever. Like, I don’t remember when maybe it was like 98 or 99. I don’t know.
I read it in 2001 or part of it in 2001. And I I’m like, I haven’t read this book in 20 years. And I still remembered all the details of the first chapter. Like perfectly, because it was so disturbing, like the first sentence was like something like hell was my grandfather’s seller or whatever. And you know, I actually, I, Ron, it’s hilarious because I didn’t know we were going to be talking about this today.
Ironically, like read part of it last night and I like re reminded myself and like, I, I. Had all like, almost all the memories of, of that first chapter. And it was really disturbing. I look back at it now and I’m like, this was so clearly performative [00:38:00] and so clearly designed like whether it was true or not.
It was so clearly designed to like coincide with like his persona. Which, when it was published, it was before the Columbine stuff. And, um, you know, and, and it was, you know, when, when he did chief, like, you know, MTB fame and, and things like that, and gun kind of mainstream, when it was very clear, it was like, he’s cultivating like this, this creepy thing because that’s the brand.
And, and so 20 years later, I can look at that and I can know that, but at the time I just remember being dislike. So grossed out, just be like, this is what the fuck dude, you know,
Brett:you’re ready for an amazing segue.
Christina:I am.
Brett:That kind of stuff can make you lose sleep.
Christina:Yes,
Brett:But. And I know we talk about our failure to sleep a lot on this show, but on nights when my brain lets me and it’s not populated with nightmarish, uh, stories from, uh, shocking personalities, I’ve been sleeping [00:39:00] super well on my helix mattress.
That was, that was pretty good. Right.
Christina:That’s actually 100% great.
Brett:So I took, he looks is a two minute quiz and they matched my body type and my sleep preferences to the midnight mattress. And I, what I love is that they’re not one size fits all. Uh, they have the perfect mattress for everyone and they make it easy to find it. Uh, they have soft, medium and firm mattresses, mattresses that are great for cooling you down.
If you sleep hot and even a helix plus mattress for plus sized folks, uh, Mike midnight mattress is a medium firmness and ideal for sleeping on my side. And after a few months of sleeping on it, I can say for sure they got that right. Um, my previous mattress was another one that comes in a box, but it was a bit too soft for me.
And I had to add. Gel cooling toppers to it. Just to stop sweating. Yeah, it got it. Yeah. A lot of tossing and turning. Uh, my helix mattress though stays cool all [00:40:00] night, no tossing and turning and no sweaty dreams. Um, helix is awesome, but you don’t need to take my word for it. He looks was awarded the number one best overall mattress pick of 2020 by GQ and wired magazine.
So if you want to sleep better and be less overtired clever, right?
Christina:but a bump.
Brett:Take the quiz order the mattress that you’re matched to, and it will come right to your door, shipped for free, and you can totally skip going to the mattress store. Just go to helix, sleep.com/overtired. Take their two minute quiz and they’ll match you to a customized mattress that will give you the best sleep of your life.
They have a 10 year warranty and you get to try it out for a hundred nights. Risk-free they’ll even pick it up for you. If you don’t love it. So if you use our link, helix is offering over-tired listeners up to $200 off all mattress orders and two free pillows. I didn’t even get two free pillows, so that’s amazing.
Just go to helix, sleep.com/overtired. I swear you won’t [00:41:00] regret it.
Christina:that’s excellent.
Brett:We went from Marilyn Manson to helix mattress, and I feel like we did it in a very respectful way. That didn’t denigrate here. I, I
Christina:No, I do.
Brett:we pulled it off.
Christina:I think we do. I think we did. Now, if we’d made like a sweet dreams are made, you know, a sweet dreams are made of these like reference, if we’d done that, that I think we wouldn’t have pulled up.
Brett:Nope. Oh my God. That would be awful.
Christina:So I’m sorry
Brett:yeah, that, that didn’t happen. That didn’t happen.
Christina:exactly. That didn’t happen. So I think that that was very respectful and good. Um, have you been following this game? Stop stuff?
Brett:Um, I have, uh, I have actually finally come to understand what shorting is like. Finally, I got her, uh, an explanation of it that made perfect sense. So [00:42:00] now I understand what kind of shenanigans, uh, the hedge funds were pulling. And how easily, how, how fake the idea of money is and how easily they were defeated.
Christina:Well, I mean, I think that. I don’t know if I would say money is fake. Uh,
Brett:money is a concept. It’s a construct. There’s
Christina:aye. I agree with that. But, but, but, but it, but it’s so real in the sense that people put an inherent value in it. Like it’s obviously a construct, but, but yeah, I mean, we haven’t been backed by gold and you know, like decades, like neither one of our
Brett:then gold is only worth what value you
Christina:Oh, of course it is. So we went with that’s the whole point, but I mean, that literally goes back to like the beginning of time, like, we’ve always had some sort of currency, like, like there’s always been some sort of system of bartering stuff. I mean, like, it, it, it’s just something that people have created, like when we assign value to stuff, you know?
And, um, uh, sometimes it’s tangible and sometimes it’s not. [00:43:00] But, um, I also wouldn’t say that I don’t, I think this was easy. I think this was one of those one-off things that I don’t expect to see again. Where you have like a bunch of, you know, self-described degenerates like banding together to buy stock that is
Brett:Why don’t you think it would happen again?
Christina:Because I don’t think, I think that this was one of those perfect storm things where you were able to get enough people together. I think that a, if you make it, like, if you do it too common, it is straight up market manipulation and is straight up an sec violation like period. Um, I don’t think that the editors are heroes at all.
Like I’m not feeling bad for the hedge funders. I’m just I’m I’m I fuck them. I’ve I feel bad for all the people who’ve. Who bought in at $300 a share or $200 a share and have lost everything because they will never recover any of that money ever. Um,
Brett:that part to me. Who, who, who lost out besides the hedge fund?
[00:44:00] Christina:every single, like normal person who bought in when it was over, it is currently $92 a share, which is up $2 from when it closed. It closed it at 90 yesterday. It is so, but that it was yesterday, it was down 60%. From it’s open. And that was, you know, it was down like a further 30% from like, um, you know, the previous week.
So it is, it is lost, um, like, like 70% of its value of its, of its high. So if you bought the stock, if you Brett took your $10,000 that you have, like your life savings, your MCL, your 401k, you did whatever, and you invested $10,000 and you bought it when it was $300 a share. Hoping that it would go to a thousand and go to the moon and you’d be able to make a nice profit.
When people started selling because maybe they bought in lower. Maybe they got freaked out because at this point it’s not just regular retail investors. It’s regular, like it’s actual, and it’s not just hedge funds, but it’s actual, like, you know, [00:45:00] uh, regular institutional investors who were investing in it too.
It’s it’s to make, you know, uh, bids and trades. When you want to sell, if you’re a retail investor, your trays go last your lowest of the totem pole, which means that when they execute the trades and that’s always how it’s worked, why this is, this is one of the reasons why Robin hood can have $0 trades.
And these companies that we all hear about democratizing finance, which is bullshit. I frankly think that there probably should be a little bit of a barrier to entry. I realize that’s unpopular, but. The reason I say that is because if this is what’s going to happen, so you put your $10,000 in, you buy it at $300 a share.
It is now $90 a share. So if you have now lost two thirds of your investment, It is never going to be $300 a share because it’s not, the company is not worth that the company doesn’t have the assets worth that. So you’ve lost at bare minimum. You’ve lost $7,500. Okay. So, or, or, or whatever, so, or, or $6,600, whatever the case may be.
So you’ve lost two thirds of your investment [00:46:00] period. It’s more than likely going to continue to fall. We don’t know when, but it’s going to continue to fall. So. The people that are losing money are the people who were part about run-up to get it to that, that all time high price, because they were consumed by the meat.
They were consumed by the idea of, Oh yeah. We’re taken on the shorts, which I’m not a fan of some of the policies around shorting and I’ve, I’ve argued kind of against them. I think there should be certain regulations. Like, I don’t think you should be able to short more shares than exist, but. I will concede that shorting is, is part of like a healthy market requirement.
Like you need to have that, that push and pull. Um, you don’t have to feel good about it, but it is one of those things that is like a natural part of, of any sort of economic system. So the people I feel bad for are the people who are posting their losses and they call it loss porn, who, some of them have lost everything.
Some of them were okay with it. Some of them, I guarantee you are [00:47:00] not. And, and that’s, that’s why I’m mad at like Melvin capital. No one gave a shit about Melvin capital. That’s a small potatoes hedge fund. They were worth like $3 billion. It’s nothing, um, in, in hedge funds firms. Uh, but it’s not like I realized that.
Do you like to, you.
Brett:to hear.
Christina:I agree, but it’s genuinely nothing. They got a loan, which we don’t know the terms of, but I’m sure that the terms were very advantageous to, you know, the, the actual, real, like institutional, like mega, you know, giant core hedge fund that loaned the money. Um, they got a loan, they got out of their position.
They, they say that they. Exited and they took a loss and now they’re going to have to make up their, their gains and other ways. And, and, you know, they, they probably wiped out their losses for the year and, and, and they’re hurting, but it’s, they will live to trade another day. Right. The people who won’t are the regular people who have now potentially lost their life savings like that, that’s what bothers me.
[00:48:00] So,
Brett:makes sense.
Christina:so, so, so that’s where I that’s, that’s where I kind of get like bothered by it because. The stock is not worth what it’s worth the company. Like, and at this point you now have this weird thing where like, you see the people who are on those boards, who are encouraging everybody to hold almost like it’s a religious sort of thing, because they’re like, we can hold longer than they can.
I’m like, okay, you don’t realize that people who had the super heavy, short interest that you were against. Most of those people have already left. And if there’s new short interest, that’s new people, who’ve decided to, to look at it and be like, yeah, you know what? I still think that this is a shit company.
I think that this is insane and I’m still making a bet that it will be, it will not close, you know, above this price on this date. Um, so I don’t know. I mean, I feel like it was a really good, it was like a really clever thing that happened. I don’t know if we’ll ever see it happen again [00:49:00] in this way, but I just I’m deeply concerned for the regular people who didn’t do it for the LOLs.
Cause like the 8 million people who were in that separate at aren’t all doing it for the LOLs, plenty of them are doing it because they want to make money. And we’re thinking, this is a shore thing, investment. And they’re, they’re seeing this, this stock go up and up and up and I’m like, yeah, I’m gonna throw my money in.
And it’s like, You just straight up gambled and flush your money down the toilet. Like,
Brett:sell high though. Like
Christina:well, you can try. And what that is is that when you sell, especially if you have a large position, that’s going to lower the price every time. Now, the smaller retail investors could have gotten out and some of them might have the problem though, is like I said, your trades go last.
So if you got in on Thursday and you bought like a position. Um, or, or I guess maybe Wednesday. Cause because Robin hood, I think, um, uh, shut stuff down or re deeply limiting how many shares people could buy on Thursday and they were doing this [00:50:00] to protect their own risk. It wasn’t because they were protecting the hedge funds is because they legally have to show a certain amount of solvency if people, um, lose, like they have to, to be able to have that money on hand, like so that they don’t fail.
So. If you got it on a Wednesday last week and you know, you got in low enough. And, um, like, but even then, like, I think it was over $200 a share on, on Wednesday. So let’s say you got in like a week ago and you got in at like $70 a share. Yeah. When it hit, you know, $300, you could execute a sell order and you might’ve been able to get out.
Now it might’ve sold at 300, but it might’ve sold at like. Two 95 or two 90, you know, it, it varies depending on when they could execute that trade for you, but the longer that it goes on the further behind you are everybody else. So. You know, it’s not one of those things like where you can just time it perfectly.
And I mean, this, [00:51:00] this is where high-frequency trading comes into place because they have our rhythms. And this is how most people are making shitloads of like professional investors are making shitloads of money. Now it’s all computers, they’re all they’re figuring out. They’re watching every micro percentage timing and they’re trying to make the times on their trades exactly.
To. You know, benefit, you know, UN UN you know, within like fractions of a second, you know, to, to be able to, uh, to, to buy and sell, to get the most advantageous timings. But it’s not just that easy. It’s like, okay, because if it hit, you know, $400, no matter how much plenty of people are saying on Reddit, Oh, I’m at a hold, go to the moon and go to the moon.
It’s like, no, plenty of people are gonna look at that and be like, Oh no, I want out. And, and so then you have a whole rush of orders and. They have to, they have to get, um, fulfilled. And like I said, retail investors, and this is how it’s, I’m not saying it’s fair. I’m just saying this is reality. Like are always last always.
Brett:so there were people who won though, right? There were people who benefited [00:52:00] from this
Christina:Yeah. I mean, sure. Just like any Ponzi scheme, like there are. But I’m serious. Like they’re all the whole reason that, that, that those things work. And I’m not saying this is a Ponzi. I’m saying that it has a lot of the same qualities of a Ponzi scheme. And what I mean by that is that for a Ponzi scheme to work, you have to have real winners.
That’s why people buy into it. Right? Because there are actual real winners. Um, Bernie Madoff was a Ponzi scheme, but he made it look like it was an actual. Hedge fund and investment fund. Like that was his kind of gift, right? Like, but those people up until the bottom fell out, people were making real money and I’m sure that there were plenty, not plenty, but I’m sure that there were a number of clients at Bernie Madoff’s who at some point, decided to just take their money out and go elsewhere and be like, you know what?
I profited enough, I don’t need this. Um, but the majority of the people were just like trusted him and. We’re like, you know, we’ve had these returns, we’ve, we’ve, we’ve done well on this. And didn’t realize that, you know, leaving their money, that he was a [00:53:00] criminal and, and that, that, you know, his, his books were cooked.
But yeah, so there are some people who have made real money off of this, but that’s, that’s a, a much smaller percentage. Like then all the people who are holding the bag when it’s gonna eventually probably. I don’t know how long it’ll take, but you know, it probably settle it like $16 or $10 or whatever.
Um, which again, if you bought it at $200,
Brett:the schemes originator. Use Reddit username is unprintable and a family paper claims to have turned an initial investment of $50,000 into a windfall of more than 40 million. So there is a winner.
Christina:Well, yeah, because a piece he didn’t sell the whole thing, so, or he claims which would be so fucking stupid. He claims he still held it. So he lost like $6.7 million yesterday. He lost like three point something million, three before. So like that windfall, I think is down to like $10 million now, [00:54:00] still nothing to seize that.
Brett:million is so fucking win.
Christina:I agree with you, but, but like, and he’s an actual, like, he was really, really smart and he’s, he’s figured out a way to do, you know, to gain the system. And he started buying it in 2019. Like he’s. Also he’s a financial advisor. Like he’s, he’s not just like some Schmoe, right? Uh, which, which is also part of the narrative, which is like the, like the uneducated masses are, are sticking it to like, you know, the, the, the so-called professionals.
It’s like, no, actually like somebody who knows how this stuff works, saw a loophole in the system. And then wasn’t able to galvanize, um, a group of people into, you know, Position, um, smart guy. Like I’m not saying that what I think is dumb. Like if I’m him, there’d be no way that I would continue holding once it was like approaching $400 a share over $400 a share.
I would sell my whole position because $50,000 of his initial investment [00:55:00] that that’s not that many shares. Right? Like that’s, that’s not enough to, to cause like an immediate kind of. Sell off thing. Um, there had been, there was a South Korean hedge fund who’d owned like 6% of GameStop and, and they weren’t shorting it.
They just they’d bought it when it, when it was cheap, they sold their whole position last week and they cited like the market volatility, but they sold on Friday. So they made billions, um, which. So, you know, it’s great. There’s one guy made like $10 million or however much it’s going to come out for whenever he sells.
And I hope that he sells before it, you know, like completely implodes, uh, for his sake. But also this is like the fucked up thing. Like I’m not trying to be a downer on anybody, but like the, the people who I’m looking at who actually really one is that South Korean hedge fund who had 6% of the company and made billions on their investment.
Brett:How do you know all this stuff?
Christina:Oh, I studied finance in college.
Brett:Why was that a major?
[00:56:00] Christina:Was well, then became a minor, but yeah.
Brett:Wow. I didn’t know that.
Christina:Yeah. I thought that I wanted to do finance as a career, and then I realized that I didn’t have the stomach for it.
Brett:Huh? That’s uh, I’ve learned something new about you. This didn’t even come up on our, our
Christina:I know an unsystematic. I know. I know. Well, it’s so rare that I ever get to talk about this stuff. Um, like, so the last week I’ve been thinking a lot more heavily about. So, and to be clear, like I’m not an expert, I’m not anybody’s financial advisor, my own finances and investments are not great. Um, I did almost buy, introduce coin last week at the height of the insanity.
Um, and the clear light of day I didn’t, then that was glad I didn’t, but like, it was one of those things where I was like, there’d be no way I would invest anything in GameStop, but when the doge coin stuff started going up, it was one of those things where I thought I might be able to time it. Right.
Because
Brett:had a little bit of Ambien.
Christina:Oh, totally. 100%. I would have lost like $2,000. Cause that was the [00:57:00] maximum I was willing to put into, into any of that. I didn’t, I didn’t do it though. And I’m glad I didn’t. Um, uh, ironically though, the reason I didn’t was because I couldn’t get on any of the exchanges. To buy the stuff and like the, the, the few like exchanges that work in the U S that would like let you directly buy doge with, with USD, um, were like completely, like almost DDoSs because so many people were trying to get into it to buy doge and Robin hood like takes a week to approve your money and your accounts and all that stuff.
And so it was one of those things where I was just like, um, I wasn’t able to get in on it that night. And I’m glad I didn’t, because it was already high. See, what had happened is it had gone up some enormous percent and I was like, okay, if it went up even like another, like, like 20%, um, I could make a couple hundred dollars if, if I [00:58:00] was able to time it.
Right. Um, clearly I wasn’t, I didn’t get in on it, which is good. Um, like a lot about that, but. In that was just a purely like greed. Like the market is insane. People are, are, people have lost their minds. I’m going to jump on the crazy train to sort of thing. And then, um, the system ironically saved me because of all the different loopholes you have to go through to, uh, your hoops.
You have to jump through rather to do that stuff. It made it impossible to do because the only way I would have been able to buy a dose easier, what would have been like I would have had to. Buy some Bitcoin, um, at an inflated price, because if you want it to get it like instantly, then you have to pay like more or whatever.
And then I would have had to convert that Bitcoin to doge. And it was one of those things that was like my margin, my potential margin of profit would have been so minuscule anyway, that I, I, I was, my fear was I was like, I’ll lose it on whatever [00:59:00] the Bitcoin conversion is from, you know, whatever my. Over the counter Bitcoin price would be.
So, um, I, I didn’t get in on doge, which again, good. Um, but yeah, I’m just concerned. Like I’m happy for like some of the, again, they self describes itself as like degenerates, who who’ve made money on this. Like good for them. I’m really concerned with all the normal people who are going to be holding the bag when this very fucked company ultimately crashes back to earth.
Brett:this week, we hit on a topic that you can speak as deeply on as you can about like nine Oh two one Oh.
Christina:I know
Brett:didn’t realize that I, your depth, it never ceases to amaze me.
Christina:you’re sweet.
Brett:This stuff makes my head spin. And I find it almost as interesting as I find 902 one Oh, which is to say,
Christina:Right?
Brett:just. No, I’m not saying, I’m not saying what you’re saying is boring. You’re [01:00:00] actually making it interesting. But finance in general,
Christina:Oh, yeah.
Brett:I, my brain just shuts off when, whenever my own finances or any finance
Christina:Oh yeah. Oh no, it can be death. It can be like ridiculously boring. I think honestly, like my whole like drawn to it was often like the weird narratives, like, uh, and the drama around stuff. Right, right. Like, totally. Like, I think that was really kind of like the appeal to me. And then, yeah. I learned about it.
I was like, Oh, this is, this is all numbers. And this is a lot of math and this is a lot of like timing and it’s kind of a game, cause it is a game and it’s kind of like a high stakes video game. Um, and uh, but then I kinda realized like, as I went through and I, after I’d taken many classes, I was like, yeah, I don’t, I don’t think the, I don’t think this is for, uh, I don’t think this is for me.
Brett:we, uh, we, we went and we have this, this topic on our list
Christina:We’re going to talk about it next week.
Brett:it has been moving from week to week for like [01:01:00] six episodes
Christina:I know, I know, but I have like a new thing. I got like a bigger device that I want to talk about that I have, that I have on loan that I have on, um, on loan for review. So next week I will, we’ll talk about it
Brett:be at the top of our list next week. We won’t talk about anything until we talk about that.
Christina:No, that sounds really good.
Brett:Okay. Well that was, that was a rollercoaster episode that you pulled off, despite lack of medication.
Christina:I appreciate that. I appreciate that. Um, it’s weird overtired, but I think a good one,
Brett:I feel, I feel like it, it fits if it’s the mold, not like classic, not like retro over tired, but this is, this is just what we are.
Christina:honestly. Um, no Taylor Swift, but that’s okay.
Brett:Yeah, I’m okay with it. She, she she’s in a television commercial with her car with a closet full of cardigans. And I, I barely understand the reference.
Christina:she has a song called cardigan and [01:02:00] yeah,
Brett:I didn’t know. Does it run deeper than that? Does she actually have a deep abiding love of the cardigan sweater?
Christina:No, I think, I think that it was just capital. I think that capital one wanted to run an ad with her. My mother-in-law did get me that cardigan for my birthday though, which was really sweet
Brett:You know what commercials are pissing me off? I can’t even remember, it’s an insurance company, uh,
Christina:It is because this was the only commercial Geico.
Brett:right? Those are the only commercials on TV, but Geico is making a whole marketing campaign out of bad puns. And if I had known there was like money to be had making bad puns, I would have gone into advertising, but it’s upsetting.
It’s just upsetting.
Christina:It’s also upsetting because Geico has had so many good ads over the years.
Brett:well, there are a lot of insurance commercials that I enjoy. The flow commercials are getting they’re played out and this whole new [01:03:00] team they brought in, I’m not loving, uh, it’s all cell phones and insurance though. Oh, and there’s a, a lot of drug ads,
Christina:Oh yeah. And,
Brett:for this side effects portion, but
Christina:and pillows.
Brett:pillows, you get pillow ads.
Christina:No, no. I was making a joke with the, my pillow guy.
Brett:Okay. Yeah. I’ll let it go. Well, Christina, I hope you get your meds filled.
Christina:Thank you. Thank you. And, um, I, uh, get some sleep, Brett hope we’ll be able to continue to have a good week. I will hopefully get some good sleep.
Brett:I’m on a helix mattress. No, that’s me.
Christina:No, that’s you. You’re going to get your great night’s sleep on a helix mattress. I’m going to beat be jealous from, from my non helix mattress.
Brett:get some sleep, Christina.
Christina:Get some sleep prep.

Jan 27, 2021 • 1h 18min
224: Quantum Sleep
Brett hasn’t slept for over 24 hours and still pulls off a mostly coherent conversation like a got dam Overtired professional. Nerd stuff. A lot of nerd stuff. And atypically free of Taylor Swift mentions.
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Show Links
Bunch
Synology
QNAS
Yeti Being Cute as F*@k
Lost Passwords Lock Millionaires Out of Their Bitcoin Fortunes – The New York Times
What are the Q# programming language and QDK?
Karabiner Elements
Marked 2
mdless
reiki
Frasier’s LEGO Apartment
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Transcript
Christina
[00:00:00] Christina: [00:00:00] You’re listening to overtired. I’m Christina Warren here with Brett Terpstra. Brett, how are you doing?
[00:00:06] Brett: [00:00:06] I am so tired.
[00:00:09] Christina: [00:00:09] This is going to be like a classic overtired episode for, uh, for our long time listeners. Right
[00:00:15] Brett: [00:00:15] I think, I think I’m as tired as the day that we came up with the name over tired in an elevator in San Francisco
[00:00:24] Christina: [00:00:24] at Twitter.
[00:00:26]Brett: [00:00:26] at Twitter.
[00:00:27] Christina: [00:00:27] Yeah, it was in Twitter. It was in Twitter’s offices.
[00:00:30]Brett: [00:00:30] Yeah, I don’t. I was so tired. I don’t remember.
[00:00:34] Christina: [00:00:34] Actually, I don’t remember. It might not have been at Twitter’s offices cause we had lunch at Twitter and I don’t remember if we recorded it Twitter. We recorded it at another startup.
[00:00:43] Brett: [00:00:43] Yeah. Where did we, where did we do that live episode? Like we sat down, I think it was with, with Dave. yeah. Yeah. It’s been how many years? Like eight years.
[00:00:58] Christina: [00:00:58] Well, it’s been like six, [00:01:00] almost seven
[00:01:01] Brett: [00:01:01] Wow. Time flies.
[00:01:04] Christina: [00:01:04] Totally flies.
[00:01:05] Brett: [00:01:05] My, uh, my cats, my older cat, his sister went with my ex-wife and moved to Ohio and she got, uh, she got very sick and I found out yesterday that she was being put down.
[00:01:25] Christina: [00:01:25] Oh, I’m so sorry.
[00:01:27] Brett: [00:01:27] and I was doing okay with it. Like it, it really brings into focus like Yetis mortality,
[00:01:33] Christina: [00:01:33] I was going to say, yeah,
[00:01:35] Brett: [00:01:35] but then a D D posted pictures of like her.
[00:01:40] Have you ever put a pet to sleep when they like wrap them in the towel? And you, you do like the comfort whole list. They go like a D D took a picture of Jessie bell in that towel. And I saw it and I just, just started crying. That was intense.
[00:01:59] Christina: [00:01:59] no, that isn’t [00:02:00] intense. Um, mean I’m not going to judge how many, but he deals with their grief or anything at all, but that’s, that’s a lot, you know, I mean, in terms of taking the photo and like putting it on Facebook, I mean, I do too.
[00:02:10] Brett: [00:02:10] when Emma died, I took a picture of her paw as she laid on the, on the table where she eventually got put to sleep. And I posted it with just the, uh, just the tagline. Uh, you did good, babe. And like, I see that in my, in my history and it still chokes me up every time.
[00:02:33] Christina: [00:02:33] I mean, it chokes me up just like hearing about it, to be honest. And like I said, I’m not judging anything because people deal with grief that way. And like I’m in no way saying like you can’t or shouldn’t do that. I’m just saying that is, you know, impactful. I’m not going to use the word triggering because that word is so loaded with so much bullshit, but you know what I mean?
[00:02:53] Brett: [00:02:53] bullshit.
[00:02:54] Christina: [00:02:54] Honestly, uh, I I’m so mad at both us the libs for [00:03:00] like feeding into it and also, you know, the people who have co-opted it and made it this negative term. Like, honestly, I’m like pissed at everyone for ruining that word.
[00:03:08] Brett: [00:03:08] there is legitimate, uh, and powerful meaning to the word, but it definitely became a divisive, uh, where you make fun of people with
[00:03:18] Christina: [00:03:18] Yes. Yes. So I am saying like impacted, uh, you know, when you see that stuff, like I said, I’m not judging at all because I, I think when my, my grandmother was dying, I, um, took a photo with my phone, which was like a flip phone of my grandfather watching her. And, you know, that was on that phone for, for years.
[00:03:43] I might’ve even transferred it off of that or whatever. And who knows. It was like, you know, sub megapixel quality. So, uh, you know, she wasn’t in the photo, but it was just like him watching her because it was just one of those things and
[00:03:54] Brett: [00:03:54] that’s intense.
[00:03:55] Christina: [00:03:55] it completely right. So like I get it and like, I’m, I’m, you know, I’m [00:04:00] ultimately like a documentarian and sorts.
[00:04:03] So like how I view my life. So I get like, you want to capture those moments.
[00:04:08] Brett: [00:04:08] it’s good for a grieving, like, like you, like, even with Emma’s death, like I went through, it took me like two years to really. I feel like I could like smile at Emma’s life and not feel pain about her death, but it’s still like seeing those images, triggers feelings that I think are important to me.
[00:04:33] Like, I think it’s important to feel them. It’s not like I’m dragging myself through like grief and misery. Uh, like every time I see that picture the feelings a little bit different and a little bit more melancholy. I think documenting that stuff serves a purpose.
[00:04:49] Christina: [00:04:49] I do too.
[00:04:50] Brett: [00:04:50] Of
[00:04:50] Christina: [00:04:50] I do too.
[00:04:51] Brett: [00:04:51] everything. So I have to
[00:04:54] Christina: [00:04:54] No. I th I think that documented, it serves a purpose, all, I mean, is that like, and this is the false of Facebook to [00:05:00] be totally candid. Is that. Um, when you see stuff like that on your feed, or when they remind you, like you take some, like you take a photo or you, you document something like, because you want to get through your grief and then on the anniversary of that or something else, like Facebook wants to remind you a year ago on this date and it’s like, go fuck yourself.
[00:05:19] Facebook. Like, I, I don’t want to be reminded of my aunt and uncle’s death or of something else tragic that happened or, or whatever, you know, um,
[00:05:27] Brett: [00:05:27] when I changed my, uh, my status to single, they stopped showing me memories with my ex-wife,
[00:05:36]Christina: [00:05:36] That’s both.
[00:05:38] Brett: [00:05:38] I
[00:05:39] Christina: [00:05:39] I appreciate that, but I’m also creeped out by that.
[00:05:41] Brett: [00:05:41] Yeah, a little bit. I like I have no, I have, I have great memories with a D D. And like, it’s not terribly painful for me to like, it is what it is. And I kinda fortunately Apple photos in my, like, uh, on this day, photos that are brings [00:06:00] up always has pictures of a D and I, so I get my share.
[00:06:06] Christina: [00:06:06] Yeah, no, I mean, yeah, that’s, that’s the thing. Um, like on the one hand and I can see both, both, both, uh, Well, both like size they’re like on the one hand, I guess either the Apple photo thing that could be depending on your relationship, but depending on how it ended, that could actually be one of those like very ups 100%.
[00:06:24] Like that could be very upsetting for people, honestly, like imagine if you were in an abusive relationship and you just happened and you had them in your, in your, you know, um, uh, photo history.
[00:06:33] Brett: [00:06:33] to go through and delete all those photos.
[00:06:35] Christina: [00:06:35] It would except Apple, like, I’m sorry. Uh, not to like take this away from breast mental health corner, but just to go in a brief aside, um, you know, photos is a, is a terrible, terrible experience.
[00:06:48] And I don’t use anything else. I will not use Google photo or whatever. So I’m stuck with, you know, um, uh, Apple photo library or whatever, but good God, if I had to go through [00:07:00] my. Freaking 12 or 13 gigabytes of photos to try to delete stuff. No, like that. That’s going to be a really intensive, difficult process, you know, like who does that?
[00:07:15] Brett: [00:07:15] I’m making a note. We’re going to come back to this, um, because I have more stuff to say about everything before we talk about computer stuff. But I actually do want to know, like, I’m the same. I only use Apple photos and I really don’t even know what I’m missing because I never tried anything else.
[00:07:36] But anyway, the reason I’m so tired. Aye. So over the last couple of weeks, yeah. As listeners are aware, I’ve had these really short manic episodes, like 24 hours of not sleeping of being like super. Uh, fast thoughts, uh, stay up, write code [00:08:00] and then sleep, and then don’t get the depression. And it’s been on this like one week cycle, like once a week, I’m missing an entire night of sleep.
[00:08:13] And then, you know, that ruins the next couple of days. Like if I, if the mania ends and I haven’t slept, then I’m a zombie, which is where I’m at right now. Cause I didn’t sleep last night and I don’t know what’s going on. And like I said, the first one of these happened before I started the new, uh, stimulant Focalin, but I can’t.
[00:08:37] Be sure that Focalin isn’t part of why this is continuing on a weekly cycle, which is like, I hate the mystery of it because I would love to know how to get off this train.
[00:08:49]Christina: [00:08:49] Yeah. No, and I don’t know what to say with that, cause yeah. Uh, I mean, I guess you could go off the focal end, but then that’s opens up its own can of like terribleness,
[00:08:58] Brett: [00:08:58] is working so much better than [00:09:00] the Vyvanse for me.
[00:09:01] Christina: [00:09:01] right? That’s what I’m saying.
[00:09:02] Brett: [00:09:02] getting so much more focus and actual work time out of a day now. Uh, choices. I like, I like last night, some nights I write really good code when I stay up all night. Um, like to the point where I’m like impressed looking through my, my commit logs last night was not one of those nights.
[00:09:27] I wrote so much bad code. Tomorrow’s going to be like a whole, like get BiSeq party to try to figure out where I, everything. Fortunately, I did write a lot of tests as I went along kind of knowing kind of knowing that I was breaking shit as I went. So I wrote tests to prove it to myself later.
[00:09:47] Christina: [00:09:47] totally. Or you could just do like a get revert and just.
[00:09:50] Brett: [00:09:50] I could, I could erase the whole night, but so I was working on bunch. I’ve had, I’ve had last few days, I’ve been obsessed with bunch, [00:10:00] um, for listeners who don’t know bunches, uh, uh, I think batch files. You remember batch files? Yeah. It’s batch files for your Mac, but it can do a ton of stuff. Anyway. I added this thing where if you indent is like, it runs off of text files and you basically, you write out all the things you want it to do apps to launch commands, to burn, and it can run snippets.
[00:10:23] So you can load in parts of other files. And I made it so that if you in dentist snippet four spaces or one tab, it will wait until every app in the bunch has finished launching before it runs that snippet. So you can do things like broaden, uh, A moon, Apple script to arrange all the windows after they load.
[00:10:46] Christina: [00:10:46] Right,
[00:10:47] Brett: [00:10:47] was a whole thing of like getting into NS workspace and watching, like observing all the notifications for Apted finished, launching, and then dealing with all the apps that don’t send proper notifications.
[00:11:00] [00:11:00] Christina: [00:11:00] which has probably many of them.
[00:11:01] Brett: [00:11:01] it was a whole thing. It. Yeah, it kept me up all night and I kinda kind of solved some stuff, but broke other stuff and,
[00:11:12] Christina: [00:11:12] Yeah. Yeah, no, I mean, I love that idea. I’m also thinking when you just mentioned like apps that don’t do notifications right away, I’m thinking, Oh wow, you, you can, that’s probably one of those features that you might be able to make work for you, but I would wonder if, if you could ever get out like the edge cases.
[00:11:31] For more people, which will be the interesting thing, I guess, to get deep back on.
[00:11:35] Brett: [00:11:35] Do you, you want to know what app was the weirdest,
[00:11:39] Christina: [00:11:39] Yes, I do.
[00:11:40] Brett: [00:11:40] uh, task paper, task paper. When you get it’s it’s and that’s running application, like it’s kind of entry in the workspace. It has no application name. It reports a bundle identifier, but no application name. Which is annoying because as I’m [00:12:00] like to make this work, I have to make a list of all the apps that are supposed to be launching and then watch for them to finish launching. But I have to, I can’t get a bundle ID from an app that hasn’t launched yet. So the easiest way to do it is to use the application name, but text our T test paper after it launches reports a blank name. So I can’t check it off the list. So I had to do this whole thing where like, I wait for the we’ll launch, a notification grabbed the bundle ID at that point and then store the bundle.
[00:12:32] Yeah, it was. Yeah. And you can tell I’m tired because I’m babbling about this stuff.
[00:12:40] Christina: [00:12:40] So other than, um, uh, staying up all night, writing bad code, um, because of it. Like your like weekly kind of manic episodes, um, and being reminded of, um, you know, deaths and, and, and have seen, um, you know, one of your, your cats, uh, put down, how else are you [00:13:00] doing? How you know, other, other, other than, uh, other than that, how is the play Mr.
[00:13:04] Lincoln?
[00:13:05] Brett: [00:13:05] so it’s super good. Super good. Um, here’s the, here’s the cool thing. We finally, uh, got our kitten out of isolation.
[00:13:15] Christina: [00:13:15] Yay.
[00:13:16] Brett: [00:13:16] introduce them and she is getting along great with Yeti. She antagonizes him a little bit. She wants to play and he’s
[00:13:23] Christina: [00:13:23] Of course.
[00:13:24] Brett: [00:13:24] to give any fucks. So he, he like beat her down once in a while, but then she’ll just be like, Oh, okay.
[00:13:30] And then curl up next to him. And like, it’s so cute.
[00:13:34] Christina: [00:13:34] That’s adorable.
[00:13:35] Brett: [00:13:35] with Finnegan, we introduced them to fast and yet he felt like the need to just move into the basement.
[00:13:42] Christina: [00:13:42] No, I remember that.
[00:13:43] Brett: [00:13:43] And, and, and I felt really bad, you know, having my, my like favorite cat, that’s been mine for like almost 18 years, he relegated to the basement.
[00:13:54] So I’m super happy that this is going so well and that they, uh, that they’re so comfortable with each other.
[00:14:00] [00:14:00] Christina: [00:14:00] That’s awesome.
[00:14:01] Brett: [00:14:01] have pheromones
[00:14:02] Christina: [00:14:02] Yeti, and bod Yeti, and God. I love it.
[00:14:05] Brett: [00:14:05] Yeah. Um, speaking of kittens, you want to hear about something cool. It’s a sponsor.
[00:14:14] Christina: [00:14:14] Hell. Yeah.
[00:14:15] Brett: [00:14:15] it’s a perfect segue. Like we should document our segways because sometimes they’re perfect and sometimes they’re hilariously bad.
[00:14:24] I just want a super cut of all of the speaking of of kittens.
[00:14:30] Christina: [00:14:30] Speaking of kittens.
[00:14:32] Brett: [00:14:32] One of the great things about cats is that you don’t have to let them out or walk them. Uh it’s it’s probably my favorite thing about cats. The downside of that is that that means the cat is pooping in your house. Uh, and except in very rare cases, they don’t know how to use the toilet.
[00:14:48] I have seen a cat use the toilet. I have even seen a cat flush a toilet, but it was like one cat out of millions. Uh, so you end up cleaning a litter box. [00:15:00] So what if there was a way to have an odor free litter box that was easy to clean and automatically replaced every month. And what if it was leak-proof but still made from an entirely recycled material and itself was recyclable as well.
[00:15:15] That’s what kitty poo club does. Kitty poo club is an all-in-one litter box solution designed to be convenient for you. So every month they deliver, uh, an affordable high quality recyclable litter box, and it comes pre-filled with the litter of your choice. He gets to choose from silica base litters or organic soy litter.
[00:15:38] And I went with the organic soil litter cause I’m a fucking hippie these days. I live with a hippie. I it’s a, it’s a whole thing. Granola co-op and soy based litter. So, uh, the silica non-toxic and also odor preventing, um, even the hippie stuff is making it easier to love [00:16:00] my kitten controlling all smells, and it is super easy to clean.
[00:16:04] They say that you don’t have to clean your little litter box at all for a whole month. Um, I, I joke. Maybe you can get away with that, but I still clean it regularly, but you don’t have to change your litter every month that you just recycle it and put a new box in. And bod actually loves it too. Uh, I tested it out by putting her usual litter box next to the kitty poo club box and she picked the pity kitty.
[00:16:32] This is a tongue twister, pick the kitty poo club box almost a hundred percent of the time. And I can’t fully explain why cats are weird, but it’s good
[00:16:42] Christina: [00:16:42] I like it. I like it. I’m I’m looking at the website now and I’m, I am looking at the box, which is recyclable and it’s cute. Like it’s, it’s, it’s a nice looking box. I never had a cat, so I’ve never had a litter box,
[00:16:55] Brett: [00:16:55] That’s why I’m doing this
[00:16:57] Christina: [00:16:57] 100%, [00:17:00] 100%. So tell us, well we’re where can people learn more about kitty poo club?
[00:17:03] Brett: [00:17:03] Well, let’s see, you can go to, to kitty poo club.com and you can enter the promo code overtired and you’ll get 20% off your first order. Uh, when you set up auto ship and you just, you get your first box in the mail, you can get a refund if you hate it. And, uh, you just start getting your, your kitty litter changed for you every month.
[00:17:29] It’s kind of beautiful. The weird stuff about the soy-based litter, is that, have you ever had like, um, I don’t know if they have them outside of the Midwest, but like these desserts where it’s like, uh, pretzels covered in like white chocolate
[00:17:46] Christina: [00:17:46] Oh yeah. I’ve had that.
[00:17:48] Brett: [00:17:48] and it like, yeah. And so it’s flat on the bottom, cause it like.
[00:17:52] Melts onto the whatever flat surface the tongue. That’s what this soy based litter does. Uh, when you pulled [00:18:00] the, the pea balls out, they look like desserts. It’s really kind of weird. I guess that’s kind of pleasant, but it’s effective. It works well. It clumps really well.
[00:18:13] Christina: [00:18:13] That’s good. That’s good. Well, that has to make it easier for the cleaning. Right. Even though you don’t have to clean it, like if it close well like that, that’s an important aspect of, of litter.
[00:18:21] Brett: [00:18:21] I don’t think it, I don’t think I had any problem with it smelling. Like I cleaned it out of habit more than anything. Um, and our kitten poops a lot. Like, I feel like if I let it go for a whole month, it would be a minefield of poop balls and peat balls. But anyway, thanks to kitty poo club for sponsoring this episode of tired.
[00:18:46] Christina: [00:18:46] Thank you. Pity. Thank you. Kitty poo club. Yes. Also great name.
[00:18:51] Brett: [00:18:51] say kitty poo. Kitty. Yeah. If you’re really tired, it’s a tongue twister. Maybe if I were more awake, it would be perfectly reasonable.
[00:19:00] [00:18:59] Christina: [00:18:59] I’m not that tired and it was a tongue twister. So thank you, kitty poo club. Appreciate you.
[00:19:06] Brett: [00:19:06] Sure. Um, so, uh, do you want to talk more about photos?
[00:19:10] Christina: [00:19:10] Yes.
[00:19:11] Brett: [00:19:11] Tell me, so I actually kind of like photos. It’s, I’ve never tried to delete a bunch of stuff, but when I want to find a photo, it’s not terribly difficult. Plus it’s got like cool searches for like, you can search for pets or search for cats. And it like automatically is indexed, not just faces, but actual like image types and everything been it’s it’s pretty.
[00:19:39] I like it. I don’t
[00:19:41] Christina: [00:19:41] I mean, I don’t.
[00:19:41] Brett: [00:19:41] with photos.
[00:19:42] Christina: [00:19:42] mean, I don’t, I don’t hate it. I just don’t. Okay. Here’s the thing. They finally added features like the pet detection and face detection and, and some of the search stuff. They added that like five years after Google photos did. And I’m not even exaggerating when I say that, like it was super late and I’m happy [00:20:00] that they have it.
[00:20:00] And I understand why there are the trade-offs right. Like Google photos is better. And, and again, I don’t use Google photos, uh, for lots of reasons, but, um, you know, uh, One of the things about it that would be attractive would be that it has. All of these AI features, that’s also makes it a little bit of a, kind of a privacy and you want, you know, Google machine learning, you know, and applying that to your stuff or, or, or not.
[00:20:24] And, you know, whereas Apple doesn’t do that. And so that’s always the trade-off with Apple, right? Like one of the reasons that Siri is so terrible is that, you know, they don’t do. A lot of the, the better machine learning stuff that, that, um, Alexa and Google assistant and, and whatnot use. But I guess for me, so I, I I’m with you on that for me, the search is okay, but like, it’s not one of those things where I like it’s okay.
[00:20:52] Maybe this is just a personal niggle. I have a ton of screenshots. And it’s not like I can ever search specifically to get [00:21:00] screenshots, you know, it’s like of a certain app or anything like that. And I, and I’m not saying that I don’t think Google photos or anything could do that any better. I’m not saying that.
[00:21:07] I’m just saying that like photos, isn’t one of those things. Um, I’ve never tried to delete a bunch of stuff either. I’m just in a place where if I try to, um, um, ah,
[00:21:20] Brett: [00:21:20] aye.
[00:21:20] Christina: [00:21:20] the photo that you just sent, I love that.
[00:21:22] Brett: [00:21:22] to interrupt, but
[00:21:23] Christina: [00:21:23] No, that’s fine.
[00:21:24] Brett: [00:21:24] out that it can differentiate between kitten and adult cat. And it does a pretty accurate job. So it popped up, it surfaced a photo of Yeti from like 18 years ago. Uh, and that is, that is Yeti in his first couple months of life. Yeah.
[00:21:44] Christina: [00:21:44] That’s amazing. And, and was that a photo that you then added an Instagram filter too? Or was that actually how the, okay. I was going to say, I was like, cause that’d be pretty amazing. If the photo you took 18 years ago, you then like, ha
[00:21:56] Brett: [00:21:56] paper. It was printed out. Like the photo [00:22:00] in my album is a photo of a piece of paper. So, you know, that.
[00:22:06] Christina: [00:22:06] totally. I do. Yeah. Um, I can kind of tell, I was like, Oh, that’s such an early Instagram filter a moment, but it’s perfect. And Oh little Yeti. That’s the most adorable photo of ever seen. I’m sorry, where you have to put this in the show notes so that
[00:22:20] Brett: [00:22:20] Yep. It
[00:22:21] Christina: [00:22:21] everyone can see posted in the discord. Um, because this is, this is honestly too cute for words.
[00:22:28] Uh, wow. Yeah, no, I mean, so I don’t want to like totally shit on, on Apple photos. I just feel like it is one of those things where if I’m trying to find a photo in Australia or something, it can get me the general vicinity, but then I’ve got to like cycle through a ton of them. Um,
[00:22:52] Brett: [00:22:52] sure.
[00:22:53] Christina: [00:22:53] I don’t know. I mean, it’s fine.
[00:22:54] I just don’t think it’s anything like groundbreaking, I guess for me, the big thing is like, [00:23:00] And I think this is probably true for a lot of people. I take a lot of photos and I do very little to actually ever go through them again or call them down and it’s weird.
[00:23:10] Brett: [00:23:10] super handy.
[00:23:11] Christina: [00:23:11] Right, right. And it used to be, and that is one thing that I do think that like, Apple’s things of like trying to find the best shot.
[00:23:17] I usually, um, I sometimes agree with that. I sometimes absolutely do not. It’s not one of the things I really like to trust. Um, but this is one of those things that I think it’s weird. And I wonder if people do this and I’d be curious to hear from listeners, like back in the day, I used to use like iPhoto and aperture to, you know, go through and really kind of Cole my photos and really sort of, you know, be conscientious about like all the ones that I took and really try to organize them now.
[00:23:46]No, like. I, I take them. I carry them from phone to phone, to phone. Um, my, my iCloud, I think I go all the way back to like an iPhone five is, is where the first, um, at least for my uploads go, I’ve got like [00:24:00] Prius up close to that somewhere. But like in my, my, but they’re, they’re not in the I photo library or photos library, they’re like in a different place, but I, you know, whenever they introduced, you know, That kind of iteration or thing of, of iCloud, like literally going back to like the iPhone five is where I kind of start.
[00:24:18] And I’m like, yep. Every photo that I’ve taken from this point forward is here and I can kind of go through them. I can kind of not, I will say like the, the widgets in iOS, that’ll like pop up and show you like recent photo things. Like you said, those can be kind of cool. Although sometimes I just see like weird photos that I’ve taken in my face and I’m like, I don’t want to see this.
[00:24:38] Um,
[00:24:39] Brett: [00:24:39] would think their machine learning could detect good photos.
[00:24:42]Christina: [00:24:42] You would, you would think, or maybe, I don’t know, maybe you would know like, yeah, you take a bunch of selfies. Cause you were sitting stuff through Snapchat or Instagram or whatever. And like, you don’t want to see this again. Like that’s, that’s the weird thing. And I don’t know if any of the photo apps have kind of accounted for that, but like in this age of like Snapchat and, [00:25:00] and Instagram, um, direct messages and stories and things like that, like you take.
[00:25:05] These kind of ephemeral photos. And if you have the settings set on your phone, as I do to like save those things, then they’re captured in and you’re like, okay, this was just like a weird one-off thing. I don’t remember the context. Like now this is showing up on my iPad for like, uh, for like two days.
[00:25:20] And I’m like, don’t show me that. I don’t want to see that,
[00:25:23] Brett: [00:25:23] I used to put keywords. I used to actually go through and like actually tag images and
[00:25:27] Christina: [00:25:27] right. Yeah. Me too.
[00:25:29] Brett: [00:25:29] create albums. And I had, I had flicker going pretty strong. Like I used to create a separate albums for all kinds of events. And I even wrote Jekyll plugins for embedding flicker galleries. And I just kind of stopped.
[00:25:45] I stopped really using flicker. I still pay for like a
[00:25:48] Christina: [00:25:48] I do too. I do too. I was going to say, I still pay for a, for premium flicker count. I haven’t used it in years, you know, and, and smug mug bought them. And, um, you know, they’re trying to kind of keep it [00:26:00] going, but, uh, If you know, who knows how long that’s gonna last? Um,
[00:26:06] Brett: [00:26:06] needed? I have scripts to download all of the original photos from flicker. Yeah.
[00:26:13] Christina: [00:26:13] nice. Yeah, somebody has like, there’s like a, there’s like a YouTube DL, but for images.
[00:26:18]Brett: [00:26:18] Yeah. Yeah. I think, I think I, yeah, I can’t remember if my script actually is all original. Like my Jekyll plugins. Do you know, it’s all custom code, but I think the script I have for backing up a flicker, I used to run it on a, like a regular. Cron job. And I don’t, I don’t think I wrote the whole thing. I think there’s existing tools for it.
[00:26:47]Christina: [00:26:47] yeah.
[00:26:48] Brett: [00:26:48] I have so many photos. I’m like, um, I’m, I’m absentmindedly scrolling through years worth of photos here. Yeah. I’ve stuff dating back to I [00:27:00] phone. I want to say. There was a point where I had a Drobo crash and I lost like two years of my digital life. And honestly, I don’t care anymore, but in that moment it felt like quite a, quite a loss in Drobo.
[00:27:16] His texted port was like, Nope, that’s gone.
[00:27:19]Christina: [00:27:19] Yeah, I remember. I remember, I remember you saying this and there were actually a lot of people who had that issue with Drobo is dribble even around anymore.
[00:27:26] Brett: [00:27:26] I really don’t think so. And like my parents have an old transporter of mine and it’s
[00:27:33] Christina: [00:27:33] They, they, they, yeah. Well, transport went out of business or they were sold to someone. Um, but it still worked for a while. I loved transporter. That was good stuff.
[00:27:46] Brett: [00:27:46] There were a few you, uh, little devices like the transporter, but I mean, really if you’re going to do it right, you’re going to get a Synology.
[00:27:56] Christina: [00:27:56] I was going to say, you’re going to get a Synology or, or a Q nap. Uh, [00:28:00] Q nap is good too. Um, Uh, it it’s, it’s also a NAS brand similar to Synology. So they’re like probably Synology biggest competitor in like the, you know, um, home, small business now space and they’re also very good. Um, We’ve had analogies for years, but I’ve, I’ve reviewed and have used Q stuff.
[00:28:20] And for certain purposes, I think people can maybe do better financially with, with acute app depending on their needs. But, um, the prices are not that different. They’re, they’re pretty comparable. And, and I read a lot of NAZA reviews and, and kind of depending on what you want kind of varies which one, but, uh, yeah.
[00:28:36] Brett: [00:28:36] is buying the hard drives and, and keeping in mind that the hard drives have a limited life. You have to be prepared to replace your hard drives. So it’s an ongoing expense to run a good NAZ.
[00:28:50] Christina: [00:28:50] It is, it is. I mean, that was actually the issue that we had with ours at one point was that, um, our, uh, our dry started failing and we had a couple of them fail at [00:29:00] once and we had to do one of those things where we had to like, um, Kind of by a second NAS kind of offload stuff so that we wouldn’t lose everything because like the raid was failing.
[00:29:10] Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I mean, we, we managed to kind of save it and rebuild it, but yeah, it was one of those things. And, um, and I should say here, I mean, I kind of can’t complain because I had a Synology and we’re going to replace it. I’ve actually been searching for, and this is why I mentioned Kuno, cause I’ve actually been in the process for the last couple of months of researching, um, Different NAZA options because we had us Knology 1813 plus, which is like their eight Bay unit.
[00:29:36] And it’s great. But at this point, you know, it’s old and, um, it still works, you know, for a good storage thing, but in terms of like fourplex or other stuff, like we have to use other servers other front ends like to, to do it. And I would really like to just have the NAS kind of do everything, um, and, and have something that’s a little bit more powerful, but, uh, the thing is, um, The, um, [00:30:00] I can’t talk, uh, some of the drives, you know, died, but, but the, the thing is, is Synology had been kind enough and this was like 2013.
[00:30:09] They sent me that unit and all the drives, which was a massive gift.
[00:30:16] Brett: [00:30:16] like as a loner. What,
[00:30:20] Christina: [00:30:20] no, no. They just like gave it to me.
[00:30:22] Brett: [00:30:22] what,
[00:30:23] Christina: [00:30:23] I know.
[00:30:24] Brett: [00:30:24] why are you special?
[00:30:26] Christina: [00:30:26] Apparently I was to them.
[00:30:28] Brett: [00:30:28] support?
[00:30:29]Christina: [00:30:29] I don’t know. I mean, apparently like, I, I guess a hell of, I know to be totally honest, well, this is what I’m saying. And it was very cool and like that’s never going to happen.
[00:30:39] And I actually feel like a, and I’m not sure if this was 100% the reason why, um, uh, it probably wasn’t, but it was one of those things where I mentioned the accidental tech podcast to the person who walked, who worked at Synology and all of those hosts got Synology is too. With drives. And, but honestly, which was probably one of the best investments, knowledge he [00:31:00] ever made, because those guys talk about it, like all the time and still use them to varying degrees or have bought new ones.
[00:31:06] So like that paid dividends, I’m sure like way more than like giving me mine. Right? Like. I, I will. I, I reviewed it. I’ll make a mention here and there. I will always sing their praises and not because they gave it to me for free, but because I’ve literally had this unit working and in like commission other than having to replace drives here and there, like it has been working the software still updated.
[00:31:27] Um, it is a great unit. Like we, we bought and we’ve since. And bought other ones. So, you know, I’m not like on the, on, on the payroll or whatever, but it was one of those things. Um, cause there’s plenty of companies have sent me shit that I’m very kind to them to, uh, didn’t want to back that like. I don’t talk about it.
[00:31:46] Cause I’m like, yeah, that was a thing. Okay. Uh, we’re Synology I’m like, no, I’m, I’m like I’ve used this for years and years and years and, and I’m a big fan, but like they more than got their money’s worth, you know, giving, [00:32:00] you know, $2,000 plus, you know, loaded systems to the ATP hosts me, probably not so much for the ATP hosts.
[00:32:07] They totally got their money’s worth.
[00:32:09] Brett: [00:32:09] I’m trying to remember what year mine is. It’s I’m looking at the info page, basic information. It doesn’t have the model number on it. I know for a fact that the model number includes the years,
[00:32:20] Christina: [00:32:20] It does. It does, but the last two digits, it’s like, you know, 15, 18, you know, um, like I think the new ones are 20, maybe 21.
[00:32:29] Brett: [00:32:29] It’s an 18, so it’s not too
[00:32:31] Christina: [00:32:31] Nice. No, not at all.
[00:32:34] Brett: [00:32:34] I love this thing. I really do. It’s an allergy. Uh, I’m, I’m putting a time stamp in here so they can, uh, uh, link them to this. Um, Synology I love you. And you should sponsor our podcast.
[00:32:46] Christina: [00:32:46] You totally should sponsor a podcast like genuinely, because we love you disk manager. Also, this is what’s funny. I really liked disc manager there. Um, kind of like, um, You know, Linux, uh, based kind of interface thing that they [00:33:00] have. And what’s funny is that people have like found a way to get disk manager to work with nonce Knology products.
[00:33:08] I’ll be at like very unofficially with that to me is kind of a Testament to how good Synology stuff is that like, cheapskates, like let’s just be real. Are. Like wanting to be like, Oh, I can build my own for less than this, but then they don’t have interface, you know, that they could, they could, you do with it.
[00:33:25] And like, that’s the reality. It’s like, could you build a computer and put more drives in it and have your own interface? That would be less expensive than a Synology or Q nap or whatever, without a doubt, 100%. And if you really want to run your own home lab and, and really want to like control everything by all means like you can have a ton of fun with that.
[00:33:43] For me, I don’t really want to deal with all of that. And I really like how well the Synology stuff works with max, even though it is obviously not a Mac product and unlike Drobo, which I never used, but you are not the only person that I’ve [00:34:00] heard from who had like catastrophic data failure from Drobo.
[00:34:02] Like I, I’m not even joking when I say I actually know five people that that happened to, I don’t know if I’ve ever known anybody who. You know, that sh that happened with this analogy where it wasn’t
[00:34:13] Brett: [00:34:13] heard of a horror story.
[00:34:17] Christina: [00:34:17] no me either. I mean, cause the thing is, is that you will get an alert. So if your rate is dying, like you’re going to get an alert. Now, if you don’t take it upon yourself to replace the drives or when multiple things are failing you’d because what had happened, I think is that the drives that, that, you know, came in our unit were certain Seagate models that had some issues.
[00:34:35] Um, this would be based on some of the Backblaze data and other things. Um, You know, so multiple ones are dying at once. Like, yeah, you might have to do what we do with like buy a less expensive secondary unit so that you can start backing stuff up and like cloning it so you can fix it and repair it. But you’re going to get a warning.
[00:34:54] It’s not going to be one of those things where it’s just one day going to, going to lose all of your stuff.
[00:34:58] Brett: [00:34:58] Yeah. Yeah. I get my [00:35:00] health reports every, I think they come weekly.
[00:35:03] Christina: [00:35:03] Yeah. Something like that.
[00:35:04] Brett: [00:35:04] and I have a stack, a stack of, I think, 10 gig hard drives, waiting for their opportunity to save the day when I can afford, when I have the extra money, I tend to buy extra hard drives. Uh, just because, you know, once a drive fails, you don’t want to be
[00:35:25] Christina: [00:35:25] No, that’s the thing. That’s the thing.
[00:35:27] Brett: [00:35:27] order and hoping it gets there in time.
[00:35:29] Christina: [00:35:29] No, totally. I mean, I am well, and it’s such an Amazon is actually pretty good. Even with the pandemic and everything. You can usually get it fast enough. And I’m now in a position. What?
[00:35:41] Brett: [00:35:41] I think it was micros who posted, uh, pictures of Amazon shipping hard drives with like basically naked with two pieces or the, of those like filled air things in it, but
[00:35:55] Christina: [00:35:55] Oh God.
[00:35:56] Brett: [00:35:56] sloshing around in the box.
[00:35:57] Christina: [00:35:57] Oh no. Oh, that’s [00:36:00] horrifying.
[00:36:00]Brett: [00:36:00] Yeah. Anyway,
[00:36:02] Christina: [00:36:02] Yeah, no, that’s not what you want. Um, you don’t want to order it like naked drives that way. And yeah, I usually like I live in Seattle, so there are a lot of Amazon distribution centers. Um, that being said, not that not that Seattle people get Amazon 70 faster, uh, it just, you know, depends on where you are or whatever, but yeah, you definitely don’t want to be in that position where like my drive is failing and how long do I have to do this?
[00:36:23] Or am I going to have to run out to best buy or wherever and like buy something?
[00:36:27] Brett: [00:36:27] Speaking of
[00:36:28] Christina: [00:36:28] Having them on hand.
[00:36:29]Brett: [00:36:29] I, so this isn’t, it it’s like a perfect segue. Like I’m, I’m a little shocked that this just happened, that I just fell into this, but so, uh, if you take prescription meds, you’re probably used to trips to the pharmacy. Uh, probably still waiting in line, uh, wishing that filling your meds was more like shopping at home from Amazon.
[00:36:54] Um, well, Hey, Amazon has a pharmacy. Now consider this. If you applied [00:37:00] the convenience of Amazon’s online, shopping and home delivery, plus they’re insanely fast shipping times to your medication refills. I think we can all agree. That sounds pretty great. Yeah. Amazon pharmacy delivers your medication directly to your door, so no more waiting in line at the pharmacy or even going to the pharmacy.
[00:37:21] You can have your doctor’s office send your next prescription straight to Amazon pharmacy. And it works with most insurance plans nationwide. Um, Amazon prime members can save on prescription medication when not using insurance and get free two day delivery. Learn more at amazon.com/overtired RX. That’s amazon.com/overtired RX.
[00:37:47] I go check it out. If you get, if you get a lot of meds, it’s totally worth, uh, uh, having them delivered to your door. Like I have, I have refills that happen. [00:38:00] Like none of them, I take five different meds and they all refill on different days
[00:38:05] Christina: [00:38:05] I I’m the same way.
[00:38:06] Brett: [00:38:06] and I have to go, I have to drive to the pharmacy and I go, I use a drive-through pharmacy, but still, I usually have to wait in line a line of cars.
[00:38:16] Pull up deal with people through a window. I mean, shit. I have to leave the house. That’s been enough. I don’t, I it’s a pandemic. I shouldn’t ever have to leave the house.
[00:38:26]Christina: [00:38:26] And then you sometimes run into the issue. At least I do where the pharmacy is out of something where they don’t have the whole thing. And so they make you go someplace else. So I seriously have a thing where I have not only do I have like five to prescribe five different prescriptions, but they could technically be filled at like they’re set to kind of be refilled at different places.
[00:38:46] So then I have to like manually, like in the app, like either call the pharmacy to transfer it over or go to a different pharmacy to pick them up. So. Having your stuff delivered is great. And I’m, I’m pretty sure that with the Amazon prescription [00:39:00] stuff, I’m pretty sure that it also works because a lot of, um, insurance companies will let you get like multiple months at once for certain types of drugs.
[00:39:06] I’m pretty sure that works that way too. So you can just, no, I know. Not for stimulus. I don’t know if stimulants can be delivered mail.
[00:39:15] Brett: [00:39:15] I don’t, I don’t know. I haven’t tried it.
[00:39:17] Christina: [00:39:17] Uh, I’m pretty sure they can’t, but uh, I think for like anything else. Like, like your antidepressant could.
[00:39:25] Brett: [00:39:25] I did try ordering Vyvanse from a, uh, dark web Bitcoin place, but it was a total scam. I got ripped off this. This was like during my two years without medication and I was desperate.
[00:39:38]Christina: [00:39:38] yeah. Where are you getting? Provigil that way too.
[00:39:41] Brett: [00:39:41] Yeah. I was getting new vigil too, to be
[00:39:44] Christina: [00:39:44] Nuvigil yeah,
[00:39:45] Brett: [00:39:45] good.
[00:39:46] Christina: [00:39:46] no, it’s not as good. That was, that was their attempt to. Extend the patent, um, before it went generic. Yeah. Um, yeah. I remember you telling me that,
[00:39:57] Brett: [00:39:57] that. I just, I barely remembered that until just [00:40:00] now those, those dark days.
[00:40:03] Christina: [00:40:03] cause I remembered us talking about, cause I considered it. I was like, is this what I’m going to use? The dark web for like, like. Psychiatric medication that is too expensive for me to get, even though I have insurance and a prescription, is this what I’m going to do? Is this what America is?
[00:40:19] Brett: [00:40:19] you Bitcoin savings. Didn’t you like buy some as part of a, a piece you are writing and then just forget about it.
[00:40:26] Christina: [00:40:26] no. They made me sell it.
[00:40:28] Brett: [00:40:28] Oh, but you’ve got to keep the money.
[00:40:32] Christina: [00:40:32] well, yeah. And then I had to pay taxes on it or whatever, but when I sold it, I sold it like, so I bought it like $10 a coin. Uh, and I sold and like my, you know, investment, I think at that point it had maybe gone up to like, I don’t remember how much it was. Maybe maybe a hundred dollars a coin, maybe $80 a coin.
[00:40:51] I don’t remember what it was. It went up, but it wasn’t, it didn’t go up to the point where it was like anything. I mean, it was, I made a profit to be clear, but I didn’t make a profit, like I would have now. [00:41:00] And it was actually funny because I was at a wedding. A couple of years ago, my best friend, Allie got married and Jim, my former boss was there and this was the last time that Bitcoin hit really big.
[00:41:12] This was, so this was like 2017. And, um, it was so funny because we were all talking and we all talking about Bitcoin. Uh, it was, it was like me and it was Jim and it was some of the people we used to work with. And it was sort of his former colleagues and, and he had a, we were all talking about how crazy it was.
[00:41:29] And as I looked at Jim and I was like, Remember when you made me sell Bitcoin, because you said it’d be a conflict of interest, even though I didn’t actually cover cryptocurrency and the look on his face, he like went white. He was like, how many did you have? I was like, I had like 15 coins Jim. And he was like, I am so sorry.
[00:41:50] Brett: [00:41:50] I had a friend who, who invested early on in Bitcoin and became a millionaire and was [00:42:00] living high on the hog and then decided to reinvest and lost his millions, I should say like millionaire, but just barely over the million Mark, but still that’s so much more money than I’ve ever had. Uh, and then it would, it would suck to have that and then lose it.
[00:42:19]Christina: [00:42:19] Have solace with myself about, um, the fact that I had to sell was that I bought it from Mt. Gox, because that was the like Coinbase of its time. Cause this was like, I wrote the piece and like, like 2012, I think. So there weren’t a lot, I mean, there weren’t a lot of exchanges like Mt. Gox was the big place and I kept it in Mt.
[00:42:42] Gox. Um, and I sold it and. Look, there’s a slight chance that I might have been smart enough to have it in a hard wallet,
[00:42:54] Brett: [00:42:54] yeah.
[00:42:55] Christina: [00:42:55] I’m just going to be real because it was that small of an investment I probably wouldn’t [00:43:00] have. And so when Mt. Gox was hacked or whatever the hell happened to it, I would have lost it all anyway.
[00:43:07] So that’s how I like try to soothe myself that. Especially now that it’s, I don’t even know what it is. It was, it was over $30,000 a coin at one point. And then at that point I’m like, Oh, cause yeah, 30,000 times 15, like, I don’t like, that’s like a half a million dollars. Like I don’t want to, it’s like, you know, like that’s more money.
[00:43:28] Yeah. So I don’t like to go down those types of things. Um, it’d be like, great. I made 800 bucks, like, you know, or whatever it was, but, um, It is what it is. Uh, so I would have lost it. I think, regardless the people I feel for like Leo LaPorte had a bunch of Bitcoin that he got even cheaper than I did. And they’re locked away on a hard drive because he can’t, he doesn’t remember his password.
[00:43:52] So it’s, it’s, you know, blocked. Yeah.
[00:43:55] Brett: [00:43:55] Oh, that would suck. Oh,
[00:43:58] Christina: [00:43:58] Yeah. There’s there. Yeah. [00:44:00] There’s this great New York times article from a couple of weeks ago, we’ll link it in the show notes where they talk to people who had like forgotten. Their their passwords. And like this one guy, he has like a Trezor wallet or like a, um, like a, a device wallet where, you know, you only have a certain number of tries the passwords and he’s got like two more attempts and what’s there.
[00:44:18] It’s like, it’s like millions of dollars.
[00:44:21] Brett: [00:44:21] I saw that as like a, uh, uh, clip. I didn’t read the article, but yeah.
[00:44:26] Christina: [00:44:26] Yeah, it’s interesting. The one thing that will make you feel a little bit better about that is that almost all the people they talk to. Okay. They’ve, they’ve, you know, been locked out of their fortunes or whatever. Most of them have reinvested in a play of money, other places. So, you know, it’s not like the end of the world.
[00:44:42] Cause that would be one of those things where I would like read that and be like, Oh my God, like, how have you not
[00:44:47] Brett: [00:44:47] were homeless, homeless, knowing that if only you had remembered your password? You would be, you would not only have a home, you’d be rich. And [00:45:00] instead you’re destitute, that would suck.
[00:45:03] Christina: [00:45:03] That would completely suck. Uh, but yeah, um, yeah, that article was from a couple of weeks ago and it was very interesting. Yeah. Um, yeah, here we go. $220 million at the time that that article was written, I think is probably higher. Now from this guy who he’s a German born programmer, Stefan Thomas, who lives in San Francisco.
[00:45:24] $222 million. And so at this point, cause it’s one of those things where if he doesn’t guess it in time, then you know, the, uh, the way it’ll work, it’ll erase it. What I would with that much money on the line, I would be doing everything I could to try to, um, make like a copy of that device so that you could, you know, like brute force a password combination over time.
[00:45:51] Um,
[00:45:51] Brett: [00:45:51] what exactly is it that gets, uh, locked away? I mean, like blockchain is supposed to have ledgers that. You know, [00:46:00] verify everything. Isn’t there a way to it. What is it? He can’t recover. Exactly.
[00:46:06] Christina: [00:46:06] Okay. So in his case, because when this would be, this is similar to Leila port, except Lila port didn’t have a Harper device for it’s like you have to set up a private key. To unlock, you know, you are, um, you know, act or you have like a password passphrase or whatever that unlocks your private key that you need to match so that you can have access to your wallet and your different coins so that you can make transactions improve that you own the block so that you can do things with those coins.
[00:46:32] And maybe they are spread across multiple blocks depending on how it works. Um, so, so you need that hash phrase and, and it’s, it’s like highly encrypted. And so there, it’s not easy to crack. I mean, it’s, it’s one of those things where I don’t even know. I think that the encryption that they use, I’m not even sure if it is technically a crack.
[00:46:51] Well now, like it would be one of those things, but the power of computing we have now, like it could potentially take years, you know, if not. Right to do it now. Now [00:47:00] the, the, the, the hope would be okay, how fast do we get to quantum computing? Uh, because if we had quantum, well, no, because genuinely, like we have quantum than quantum could potentially like, solve those hashes and, and break into that stuff.
[00:47:13] The thing with, um, this guy’s thing, because you know, it, his hash, it might’ve been like an actual password that he could remember, um, that, that he had, like for his, his wallet. That hardware piece has like a, uh, you know, it’s kind of like an iPhone. Like you can only enter in a wrong password so many times, and then it erases it and kind of holds everything hostage and that’s like a security device.
[00:47:35] Um, but I would think that potentially the, the a, I would think maybe the security on that might not be as strict beef. He used a N a common word passphrase. It might be something you could brute force more easily than, um, something else. The problem with that is again, like he only has so many tries and he doesn’t want to blow them all.
[00:47:54] So, but if I were him and if I had like $200 million on the line, I would be like, okay, [00:48:00] I’m going to talk with the Israeli companies that I’m a focal, brighter runner. I’m not even joking. Like the companies that did the stuff to the iPhone where, you know, they basically made a copy of the iPhone and then you could brute force, you know, the, uh, the pins to get in.
[00:48:14] Like I would try to figure out, okay, how can I make a copy? Of this treasure of this device so that I can then try to brute force my way into it without like killing the physical device itself. Like that’s what I would do. Uh, but this is like the downside, I think, well, there are lots of downside. I think one number one use a damn password managers is rule number one, right?
[00:48:35] Like if you’re going to be doing any of these things, use a password manager. Number two, I would never use like these types of hardware wallets only because okay. It’s one thing that he forgot his password and that’s unfortunate, but what if the hardware component fails, right? Like which, which to me doesn’t seem like a completely unlikely.
[00:48:58] Possibility. Cause a lot of times these are just [00:49:00] kind of like Android based or other kind of, you know, um, you know, kind of electronic based things and they’re, they’re nice and they’re convenient, but it’s one of those things where I’m like, like most people who have like billions or hundreds of millions of Bitcoin, unlike this guy have what they call them in cold storage where they’ve printed out their long keys.
[00:49:18] Um, and hashes and they have them in like safe deposit boxes. And I think like the Winklevoss twins even have it, where they have like part of keys in certain, in different places. So you have to, you know, like multifactor thing, but they have like literally billions of dollars in crypto. So I understand that at the same time, part of me, I’m like, if you have to go through all this trouble for this fake money, I don’t know.
[00:49:40] Maybe that’s a sign
[00:49:42] Brett: [00:49:42] I think you should, like, you should print sure. Print your hash on like the back of the constitution and then have a national treasure, like a hunt, like, like get people to partake in like a whole national treasure hunt with $200 million on the line. [00:50:00] I, that would be fun. That would be something an eccentric millionaire.
[00:50:04] Could a billionaire you’d have to be a billionaire. Anyway, why are we going to encrypt for quantum computing? What’s the future of encryption.
[00:50:13]Christina: [00:50:13] Yeah, no, that’s a fantastic question. Uh, our security models will have to change and I, so two of my friends are actually quantum. Researchers and, um, uh, like, like that’s what they have their PhDs in. And I’ve talked to them about that because it’s really, it’s a really interesting question.
[00:50:31]Brett: [00:50:31] Yeah, I don’t, I understand the idea of quantum computing and I’ve watched enough YouTube videos trying to like, get a grasp on it, but it’s, I I’m going it’s it’s going to happen. Uh, quantum computers are going to happen and I am going to be left behind. Like I I’m too old to learn an entirely new paradigm.
[00:51:00] [00:51:00] I, I am, I’m a microchip guy and I probably will be until I die. I hope that’s not true, but that is my fear.
[00:51:09]Christina: [00:51:09] I’m going to put a link in our show notes to you for Q sharp, which is. It’s still kind of, and it is not actually related to C-sharp though. The naming is just Microsoft naming. Um, but it is like, uh, it’s like a open source program language for developing and running quantum algorithms. And it’s like, Right now, because we don’t, even though we don’t have quantum computers, they’re still trying to find ways to kind of interface the idea of them and things that we have.
[00:51:40] It’s pretty interesting. Um, if you’ve ever used Python, I mean, it’s pretty similar to Python. So I’ll put a link to that in, um, in our notes for people who might be interested in some of that stuff. Because when I, uh, both Chris and Sarah, uh, work with Q sharp and. [00:52:00] And work with, um, quantum stuff in general and, and, you know, like our physicists, uh, but also computer scientists and are interesting people.
[00:52:09] So I, you like, I, I understand enough, like, high-level about it. Like the low-level stuff. There’s no, like it’s over my head, but I understand the high level stuff, but I’m fortunate enough to play animal crossing and be in, in, um, Twitter threads with, uh, to, um, um, you know, um, quantum people. So
[00:52:27] Brett: [00:52:27] I always, I think I have a grasp on it until I try to explain it to someone else. And then I realized very quickly where all the holes in my understanding are.
[00:52:36]Christina: [00:52:36] Yeah. I mean, I, but I think that’s kind of the whole thing. It was interesting when I gave a talk at Purdue a couple of years ago, and they were kind enough to take me on a tour of the lab where they’re trying to build part of a quantum computer. And, um, so I was able to kind of see like the, um, you know, the.
[00:52:53] The different rooms related. They’re trying to build some of the materials and whatnot. And, uh, it’s really interesting.
[00:52:59][00:53:00] Brett: [00:52:59] do you want count? Can I switch topics? I have good news on the Apple, big surf front,
[00:53:07] Christina: [00:53:07] Okay, please, please tell me because I still have not upgraded.
[00:53:10] Brett: [00:53:10] the last developer seed fixed carabiner. Um, so you can run it without disabling sip now
[00:53:20] Christina: [00:53:20] Thank God.
[00:53:22] Brett: [00:53:22] and related, um, you know, better touch tool, right?
[00:53:28] Christina: [00:53:28] I love better touch tool is the best.
[00:53:30] Brett: [00:53:30] latest version of better touch tool can do a hyper key all on its own. So it can treat your caps lock key. It can make it instead of caps lock, it holds down control, shift, option, and command at the same time.
[00:53:44] And then if you just tap it without hitting any other keys, it functions as escape, which is basically all I really use carabiner for. So now I, there. Um, I’m still, it’s still a little bit, uh, it’s [00:54:00] a new feature. Let’s put it that way. Uh, there’s some kinks to work out, but I’m excited that, uh, cause I, the hyper key, all of the shortcuts I actually assign in the hierarchy are in better touch tools.
[00:54:12] So it’s, it’s super cool that I could do it all in one place.
[00:54:15]Christina: [00:54:15] No. I mean, that’s ideal. That’s ideal. And I see in kind of our notes or whatever, like you also managed to fix marked.
[00:54:21] Brett: [00:54:21] Oh yeah. So just to recap. There was this thing in big Sur where, um, whenever marked output a PDF, um, using technologies that worked fine in all previous operating systems, instead of outputting a backup, pure PDF with selectable text, it would help put a Rasor image that you couldn’t zoom or select or anything.
[00:54:45] And it didn’t make sense. And I, in order to fix it, I was, uh, on this like months, months, long quest. To just completely, uh, rewrite Mark. So it could circumvent this issue [00:55:00] and it was a huge task and I was not even halfway through it. When all of this sudden, uh, an Apple update when 11.2 went public, uh, it, it just suddenly worked and I could put my rewrite on the back burner and that was such a huge relief.
[00:55:16]Christina: [00:55:16] That’s awesome. I’m really glad to hear that. Like, That’s cause, cause I mean, cause you know, you make some of your money off of, um, off of this and, and you know, like it’s frustrating when stuff is broken and you’re like, how do I fix this? And we’re gonna have to refactor and redo everything. Like, am I going to have to rethink the entire design of my application
[00:55:34] Brett: [00:55:34] I
[00:55:34] Christina: [00:55:34] because this thing doesn’t work.
[00:55:35] Brett: [00:55:35] to any of my, I did former posts and feedbacks and I got, I got nothing. They fixed it though.
[00:55:41] Christina: [00:55:41] Okay. They fixed it, which is great. But no, I mean, that’s the frustrating thing to me, right. And I’m not saying like, no company is perfect with this, but I do feel obviously disclosure. I work at Microsoft, uh, you know, but, um, and, and Microsoft is good and bad about this. The one thing I will say, like we do have multiple feedback mechanisms that can sometimes be a problem because [00:56:00] people don’t know which way to use, but I will say by and large, you know, try to be responsive and at least try to like give.
[00:56:07] A response, like you’ve been heard, even if it isn’t fixed or done the way people want. And it was frustrating to me sometimes with Apple stuff is that I know that they have really good people working there, but it is such a black box of like feedback going in and then no response or followup until it’ll be fixed or not.
[00:56:26] And, and you don’t really know why. Um,
[00:56:29] Brett: [00:56:29] Apple have developer advocates?
[00:56:31]Christina: [00:56:31] Developer relations, but they don’t have advocates the way that like, uh, we do and Google and Amazon do know
[00:56:38] Brett: [00:56:38] Yeah,
[00:56:39] Christina: [00:56:39] they should.
[00:56:40] Brett: [00:56:40] yeah, there should be. I’m going to, I’m going
[00:56:41] Christina: [00:56:41] They should.
[00:56:42] Brett: [00:56:42] that I be a developer advocate for Apple. I’ll take that gig, uh,
[00:56:47] Christina: [00:56:47] I think you’d be great at it.
[00:56:48] Brett: [00:56:48] my plush life of indie developer. And I would, I would, I would pick up that mantle and I, I, I would make the sacrifice. I can do that.
[00:56:57]Christina: [00:56:57] Yeah, no, I think he’d be great at that. And I mean, I [00:57:00] think that, that, um, when it’s weird, I think that the devil for them falls under marketing and it varies from company to company. Uh, how that works and I don’t think that’s inherently a problem. Cause I think marketing at Apple is actually very different from marketing and a lot of other places, I think that like they treat marketing as like a very high level discipline that is very closely tied to product.
[00:57:19] And a lot of people hear marketing, especially engineers and they roll their eyes and they think that it’s like bullshit or a lesser thing. And I think that’s false on its space, but I think especially at a place like Apple, Like their marketing people are very deeply connected with the product stuff, but, uh, at like Microsoft it’s under engineering, um, like we’re, we’re not like part of the engineering teams, but like I’m classified as an engineer.
[00:57:44] And like, we’re, we’re not like under, like we are ultimately in the Azure organization. And Scott Guthrie is my executive vice president, not, um, Chris , who’s the chief marketing officer. Um, I think at Google. It might be [00:58:00] under engineering, but it’s in a slightly different way. Some places it’s under product.
[00:58:05] Um, some places it’s under marketing, it varies, but yeah, I mean, look, I think. Yeah, I think that that Apple should hire you as a developer advocate. I think you would actually be a perfect person for that who could give them feedback, who could also help communicate with the public, like what’s going on because, and, and that’s the thing that I think would be at least how they’re currently one kind of an anathema to it, which is.
[00:58:28] You have people who are more public facing, who are talking about stuff. And certainly you have people at Apple who do some of that on they’re more open than they used to be. They’re more blogs and, and some people are allowed to speak more at events and that sort of thing, but it’s not like a super common thing.
[00:58:45] Um, at Apple where, you know, you have a lot of people speaking on the outside, um, About the company or about things people are doing or even about, you know, kind of tangentially related stuff. You know what I mean? Like it’s all [00:59:00] very like, like, Oh no, we are not going to publicly talk about this unless we’re one of the few teams that has a blog post.
[00:59:07] Okay. Well, it is. And it’s like, I don’t know. I, I, I obviously come from a place of bias here, uh, because my past has been as a journalist who has often tried to get those messages out to people. And then now as, as an advocate, who again, tries to get those messages out to people, but also tries to get that feedback back to the product teams.
[00:59:26] I’m a big fan of transparency, just in general. That’s kind of my personal emo. I understand their reasons. You can’t always be transparent because a people can’t always handle it. And B it’s not always in your interest to, to do so, but I think that we better just to like, let people know what the score is, or at least acknowledge, we hear you like.
[00:59:46] It’s awesome that they fixed the issue was I bet that you would feel better if you knew. Was it something that I did or was this something that was broken in big Sur? Like, to me, that’d be the thing that would drive me nuts.
[01:00:00] [01:00:00] Brett: [01:00:00] it. Yeah, it was, it was definitely a big Sur issue. Uh, because the version of Mark that I tested with was the, like a build from a previous version that it was not working on. And then the update ran and then it was working.
[01:00:15] Christina: [01:00:15] Right. No, totally. And, and, and so clearly they changed something, but you know what I mean? Like, but to know like, okay, was, do they have to change it on their end or was, or, you know what I mean?
[01:00:25] Brett: [01:00:25] to know why it broke to begin with in what world. Should a print to PDF function ever output arrests or image, like why was that even possible?
[01:00:35] Christina: [01:00:35] Right, right. And, and I mean, and, and the, the real answer might be, they made some changes for some other reasons, and it wound up having a side effect of breaking things that, that, you know, had issues for third parties and whatnot. And they decided to either revert it. Or, or fix it, you know, in some other way.
[01:00:55] Um, and, and, and, you know, and, and like that is a completely common thing. [01:01:00] You know, you make a change to refactor to do something and you don’t realize all the consequences it can have, and that’s why you need users and especially developers to file feedback so that you can know that stuff. But I dunno, it just feels like it’d be, if you knew, like, if you had an acknowledgement of like, why it was broken, like, you know, you don’t need a whole post-mortem on, I’m not saying that, but it.
[01:01:22] It would be good, or at least at least if there was like a way who, because to me, I think the bigger thing is like you file. Cause I, this runs, I, it happens to me and this is more with user facing stuff, not with a lot of the API stuff. And it’s like, I file a radar or excuse me, a feedback. And it goes into a black hole.
[01:01:36] And I don’t know if it’s been seen and I don’t know if it’s been acknowledged and maybe it’ll want to be fixed and maybe it won’t, but I just kind of put it out there and it’s like, even if it were fake, just like sort of a check Mark, that’s like, we’ve seen this. Would placate me, even if, even if it was all a facade, I’m not going to lie.
[01:01:54] Like give me the warm, fuzzy feeling that at least someone has read this.
[01:01:57] Brett: [01:01:57] yeah, right to me. [01:02:00] Like maybe it’s not in your best interest to be transparent, but you should at least pretend.
[01:02:06] Christina: [01:02:06] Yes, this is all I’m saying. Just even if you’re not really being transparent, fake it. Um, because that goes a long way, but.
[01:02:14] Brett: [01:02:14] so it’s random aside, like speaking of developer relations, I have this project called MD less and it’s this silly little script I wrote quite a while ago. Let’s see. When was this last updated? Uh, 17 months ago, originally six years ago.
[01:02:35] Christina: [01:02:35] Yeah, this is like a services thing, right?
[01:02:37] Brett: [01:02:37] it’s a, it’s a command line tool that is like a replacement for your pager, like less or more, or, um, and it, it does it syntax highlights marked down.
[01:02:49] It doesn’t render it, but it will basically format it for, um, for the screen for the terminal. And, uh, it was, uh, [01:03:00] It was a little passion project and there are probably better tools since then that that do it well. But for some reason it suddenly gained a lot of users and I have 34 closed issues, but I have 19 open issues right now.
[01:03:17] And every one of them is, you know, uh, a half hour fix and. I just, I need to turn this repo over someone who still gets his shit, all these people. Like it’s just a tool for like previewing your markdown. Cause obviously you’re writing it to go somewhere, like get hub or into, into marked or something. Like, it’s just a way to like, get a quick look at your markdown.
[01:03:43] And people are very much pushing it to its limit. Anyway. I shouldn’t even be talking about it. I don’t need it to get any more popular.
[01:03:52] Christina: [01:03:52] Well, I mean, but that could actually be a thing. I mean, is it on GitHub? Where is it? Where is it living right now? Okay. I mean, I, I think the, the biggest thing there would [01:04:00] just be to create an issue and, and call for maintainers and just like full out, say, I need a new maintainer for this. I need to hand this off.
[01:04:07] Brett: [01:04:07] Good call. I should do that. Yeah, I did that with, uh, uh, the sublime text package I wrote for Merck down, uh, it was called cleverly enough markdown editing, um, and it included, uh, some cool themes. And I, it was a very like opinionated package that basically just made things work the way I wanted to, uh, and with all the markdown editing shortcuts and everything.
[01:04:33] And I, it started getting popular and I, it did everything I wanted it to, and I wasn’t prepared to add any other people’s stuff to it. I did, I, I ended up turning the repo over to, uh, I forgot, I can’t remember his name, but he took over and he’s, he’s maintained it and he’s added a lot to it. And I still have, uh, like push permission on it, but I don’t [01:05:00] anymore.
[01:05:00] So, yeah, I mean, that works. I envy, like I’ll probably turn my NBL repo over to someone who cares to maintain it at some point too, after envy ultra is out.
[01:05:15] Christina: [01:05:15] Yeah, which I think would be great and that, that would make people happy. And if some, if it’s not people are using, you know, this, this, um, uh, Mark less, um, tool, um, then, and, and you, you don’t have the time or the energy to maintain it and you don’t want it to like, to take on like the burden. Yeah. I think just call it food, put a call out for a new maintainer and hopefully somebody will step up.
[01:05:37] I think that’s kind of the great thing about open source.
[01:05:40]Brett: [01:05:40] I have 104 repositories on GitHub
[01:05:44] Christina: [01:05:44] That’s amazing.
[01:05:45] Brett: [01:05:45] every one of them is an actual project that,
[01:05:48] Christina: [01:05:48] See, most of mine are not. That’s the thing. I don’t know how many, um, repos I have. Um,
[01:05:54]Brett: [01:05:54] I have, I have a tool called Reiki. Um, that is [01:06:00] a like REI K. I like the, the healing art, but it, it, it, it’s a shortcut for rake, uh, like the Ruby Ruby version of make, and you can just type R and then it’ll fuzzy match the commands. And create like with Reiki, you, you type things like rake, uh, build, and then in square brackets you put like CSS to build like Trish your CSS.
[01:06:28] This is if you’re, if you’re not using gulp, like a good person, um, and, uh, rake means w with Reiki, you just type R B and then, uh, like colon CSS. And it would be, it would run that command for you. And it, it has the auto-completion or everything. I honestly don’t know the commands anymore, uh, to run most of my rig tasks because Reiki has made everything so simple.
[01:06:55]I highly recommend Reiki. I’m going to link it in the show notes.
[01:06:58] Christina: [01:06:58] Lincoln Lincoln there [01:07:00] I have 37 GitHub repos, uh, in my personal thing. So
[01:07:04] Brett: [01:07:04] how many of them are worth me downloading? Uh, I would recommend probably. 80 out of 104 of mine, you can have
[01:07:13] Christina: [01:07:13] Yeah, so yours are good. Now I’ll tell you what, what is good of mine? So my, my Rebos are not worth downloading. What is worth, what is worth looking at me for, and I’ve heard this from multiple people. My stars are lit. I star really good shit. So
[01:07:28] Brett: [01:07:28] girl on get home?
[01:07:30] Christina: [01:07:30] I am, but no underscore, cause they don’t allow underscores.
[01:07:32] Brett: [01:07:32] Oh, okay. Let’s let’s look at Christina’s repositories. You have a TM themes repository. Is that a mirror?
[01:07:41] Christina: [01:07:41] a no that’s mine.
[01:07:43] Brett: [01:07:43] You’re awesome.
[01:07:45] Christina: [01:07:45] Yeah, I created that one and, um, a lot of it was things from other people and I actually created it for a Mashable article I wrote in like 2010 or something or 2011. And, uh, yeah, it it’s remarkable. It was remarkably popular for a really [01:08:00] long time. Um, that’s like the most popular thing, um, that, that I’ve done on, on, uh, uh, get hub.
[01:08:05] Some bookmarklets just some work stuff, some stuff that’s not public. Um, but if you look at my stars, my stars is. Sorry, go on.
[01:08:13] Brett: [01:08:13] this number 1,600. Is that the number of things you’ve started or is that how many people have started your stuff?
[01:08:19] Christina: [01:08:19] No, that’s how many things I’ve started.
[01:08:20] Brett: [01:08:20] Jesus,
[01:08:22] Christina: [01:08:22] I know. So I could do some calling, but if you just like go through like the, the top thing, like it’s, it’s good. Like I find good things and I start it as, so.
[01:08:35] Brett: [01:08:35] set up a feed. You could like have an, uh, curated newsletter of just your latest get hub, repo stuff you could use.
[01:08:45] Christina: [01:08:45] I like that.
[01:08:46] Brett: [01:08:46] we talk about Cindy at all?
[01:08:48] Christina: [01:08:48] We did. We talked about Cindy. Yeah. So I could use Cindy.
[01:08:52] Brett: [01:08:52] Yeah.
[01:08:53] Christina: [01:08:53] I actually really liked that idea. I like that a lot. I also like that just having a feed that I could have on like the website that I’ve been in [01:09:00] this process. We’ll talk about another episode we’re running out of time, but I’ve been working on for a long time.
[01:09:04] Like I’m rebuilding like a whole world presence and it’s been taking a while because I’ve been wanting to really figure out how I want to do it the right way. But I would actually really like to have a feed of just my GitHub stars because my stars are good. Like I do find cool projects that I then do.
[01:09:18] And like my, you know, Justin Williams.
[01:09:21] Brett: [01:09:21] Yeah,
[01:09:22] Christina: [01:09:22] Okay, well, Justin, um, uh, who’s literally like my twin.
[01:09:26] Brett: [01:09:26] I, I sent out my first March newsletter using Sunday and it was basically just plain text and he wrote back immediately is like, that is the most Bret terptree newsletter I’ve ever gotten.
[01:09:39] Christina: [01:09:39] I love that so much. So, so Justin and I are actually remarkably, like, he’s the male version of me. It’s actually quite freaky. He’s two days older than me. We are incredibly similar on so many levels. It’s it’s uncanny, but anyway, he frequently texts me and he’s not the only person who’s done this. Who’s like, I really enjoy following you on GitHub [01:10:00] because the stuff that you star, you find some really good stuff.
[01:10:03] And I’m like, thank you. I, I think so. You know, like I don’t like, I, that was never kind of like my. Like goal with that. It’s just, you know, I kind of use it as a place where I’m like, Oh, I like this project. And then I do search my, my starred packet. My started repositories, you know, from time to time. Cause I’ll be like, what was that thing?
[01:10:22] And that’s why I start a bunch of stuff. Cause I’m like,
[01:10:24] Brett: [01:10:24] how do you, how do you find all this stuff? What’s your, uh, What’s your source.
[01:10:30]Christina: [01:10:30] It varies. Hacker news is a big one. Sometimes it’s sometimes it’s the explore page within GitHub. Sometimes it’s other things, hacker news. That was honestly a big one. If I’m being honest.
[01:10:40] Brett: [01:10:40] Yeah. There’s actually a cool iPhone app. I would have to let’s see. It might be in my reading folder right now. Read, um, No, maybe not, but there’s a cool iPhone app that, and I think it just pulls like, based on stars, like [01:11:00] most currently popular stuff, but I find a lot of, uh, fun. I’ll find it and I’ll link it in the show notes.
[01:11:06] It’s I find something cool. Every time I open it
[01:11:09] Christina: [01:11:09] That’s awesome.
[01:11:10] Brett: [01:11:10] clouded by senior clouded advocate by day pop culture nerd at night. Um, I’m, I’m creating a Pinboard bookmark for your starred feed because I’m going to steal stuff from you and use it for my web excursions on my blog.
[01:11:30] Christina: [01:11:30] Honestly, it’d be great for that because there, and there’ve been so many things that I’ve brought up on the pod that have been things like get hub projects that have been things that I’ve like, that I’ve started. Yeah.
[01:11:39] Brett: [01:11:39] here and everything. Yeah.
[01:11:41] Christina: [01:11:41] Yeah. And like, um, there’s, there’s some interesting things. Um, like, uh, what was, what was an interesting one, uh, had have a vessels there.
[01:11:49] So there’s rgb.net and open RGB. So, cause I’m in the process of building a PC and I want to make it all RGB ified, but all PC components [01:12:00] have this one appeal to you, but this might appeal to some people. All the components. RGB is a big thing and although most of them will use open a RGB or addressable RGB headers on, on motherboards.
[01:12:13] Some of them use their own proprietary controllers that then go into this headers and. Most of them have their own software stacks that you need to control the lights, which is a fucking pain in the ass. Because if you have different brand of lights for your fans versus like your cooler versus something else and, or maybe yes, maybe built into your case and you want them all to work, you don’t want to have like, Three programs running so that you can control like your lights.
[01:12:38] So there is this, uh, program, um, open RGB that is basically kind of like reverse engineered or found API APIs into all of those things. So they created one interface to be able to control all the lights from all these different controllers, which is interesting. Um, rgb.net is another one. And, um, uh, liquid, uh, there’s also one [01:13:00] called Artemisia.
[01:13:00] There they’re like a bunch of things. I kind of went down that rabbit hole, um, a couple of days ago as I’ve been, I’m still trying to find a damn CPU. So if anybody has a hookup on a 5,800 X or 5,900 ex AMD chip, let me know in the discord, but, um, uh, that’ll be a fun topic for the future when, uh, we can talk about, uh, Christina is adventures and, um, hardware building.
[01:13:24] Um, although like I haven’t done this in forever, but it’s so much easier than it used to be. That it’s very, it’s very sweet. And I know we went to like, uh, I’m not trying to like pick on or say anything to any of the many, many, many nice men. Who’ve talked to me about PC building because I, I very much appreciate them, but the level of mansplaining has been.
[01:13:45] Uh, well, it’s just funny to me cause I’m like, cause, cause I I’ve been saying Katie I’m like, I haven’t done this in awhile, but I think people hear that as like you’ve never done this before and I want to be like, okay, but it’s way easier now. Like I don’t have to short motherboard [01:14:00] pens anymore and you know, and, and like you have a lot easier components and you know, it’s, it’s, it’s easier than it used to be.
[01:14:08] So it literally is just plugging Legos at this point. So. Um, I, I, but I’m excited to do it because who doesn’t want to play with Legos as an adult, but, uh, yeah, some of the
[01:14:19] Brett: [01:14:19] Sorry. I’m sorry.
[01:14:20] Christina: [01:14:20] one, no, go on.
[01:14:22] Brett: [01:14:22] there’s this, uh, You know, Lego Lego has these, uh, kind of contests too. If you, if you get like 10,000 votes, you, you get to make an official Lego set. And this dude built, uh, an entire replica of Frasier’s apartment.
[01:14:40] Christina: [01:14:40] Ah, yes. Yeah. What are they?
[01:14:43] Brett: [01:14:43] link this. He only has like 2000 votes right now.
[01:14:46]I I’m sorry. I derailed everything we were talking about, but we’re also out of time.
[01:14:51] Christina: [01:14:51] we are also at home. I was going to say, um, I got the friends sets that they did from that series
[01:14:58] Brett: [01:14:58] Nice.
[01:14:59] Christina: [01:14:59] because [01:15:00] they, somebody created like a central perk. Um, and, and so they, they did that one and also Sesame street, but yeah, I really hope the Frazier one comes to life.
[01:15:11] Brett: [01:15:11] the Frazier, like, I guess, cause I’m currently like watching all the Frazier again. So it’s the one that matters most to me. Um, and I think I might be alone in that. I don’t, I don’t know if anyone out there loves Frasier as much as I do right now.
[01:15:27] Christina: [01:15:27] Okay. Actually, you’re not the only, I’ve heard this from so many people. Like, I, I ’cause, it’s, it’s come back, you know, on a number of different, um, uh, like platform stream platforms or whatever, but I’ve actually heard from a large number of people, um, that they have gotten into Frazier. The first time I’ve gotten back into Frazier.
[01:15:47] So, no, you’re not alone.
[01:15:49] Brett: [01:15:49] Good to know. Good to
[01:15:49] Christina: [01:15:49] It’s had kind of had kind of, um, Lego ideas. That’s what the program’s called.
[01:15:54] Brett: [01:15:54] Yeah. Yeah. I’ll, I’ll find a link to, to both the contest and this particular [01:16:00] set, uh, Verde. I just found this, uh, this app through your, your, your stars that we’ll talk about next time, if it’s any good. All right. Well, Jesus, I, I, uh, I pulled off a long episode considering like zero sleep. Maybe. I don’t know if it was good.
[01:16:20] I really can’t tell.
[01:16:22] Christina: [01:16:22] Yeah, let us know in the discord. Also, thank you. In the discourse, people who’ve worked on election stuff for validating my fears of, um, electronic voting machines. I appreciate you. Uh, that makes me both like, feel maybe more paranoid, but also like less paranoid. Like I don’t feel. Not more paranoid makes me feel maybe like more worried, but also less paranoid.
[01:16:44] So I, uh, my, my fears of election machines or electronic voting machines don’t seem like a crazy persons. So appreciate that from you. Um,
[01:16:54] Brett: [01:16:54] a whole conversation in here on, behind on.
[01:16:56] Christina: [01:16:56] yeah. I, uh, I, I’m trying to be more active in the discord, [01:17:00] so
[01:17:00] Brett: [01:17:00] love that. I love that for you.
[01:17:02] Christina: [01:17:02] yeah, me too.
[01:17:03] Brett: [01:17:03] That’s great. I appreciate it. Trying to keep a community going.
[01:17:07] Christina: [01:17:07] Yeah, no same. And I’m sorry that I hadn’t believed.
[01:17:09] Brett: [01:17:09] involved.
[01:17:09] Christina: [01:17:09] It for sure. And I’m sorry that I haven’t been, um, uh, up until now, but I will be, I’m going to make a very like, concerted effort going forward because I like to connect with people who listen to us and I would like to learn new things and meet new people.
[01:17:22] So, um, but yeah, we’ve been going on for awhile and I have to get to a meeting and you have to hopefully get some sleep,
[01:17:29] Brett: [01:17:29] Yes, I, uh, I will get some sleep, Christina, get some sleep.
[01:17:34] Christina: [01:17:34] get some sleep, Brett.

Jan 20, 2021 • 1h 13min
223: Zealotous
The Discord topics bot suggested we cover Religion, Politics, and TV this week, with optional mention of Taylor Swift. It’s like it knows us. Or Brett programmed it…
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Show Links
Gerber Artifact
Gospel of Judas
Beyonce Illuminati
Dominion suing myPillow guy)
Wired Podcast: Voting Machines
History of Swearing
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Transcript
Brett
[00:00:00] [00:00:00] Brett: [00:00:00] Hello, you’re listening to over-tired. I’m Brett Terpstra and she’s Christina Warren. And I just nailed that intro. How’s it going, Christina?
[00:00:10] Christina: [00:00:10] You just nailed it. I’m so excited for you. Uh, I’m pretty good. I’m pretty good. It is. Uh, I was, I said like when we were talking pre-show it’s it’s the last day of a school meeting is the last day of like the hellish, like four years. We’ve just spent. We’re about to graduate into something better, hopefully
[00:00:30] Brett: [00:00:30] Yeah. And the seniors are totally dissing the freshmen.
[00:00:34] Christina: [00:00:34] completely, completely.
[00:00:38] Brett: [00:00:38] Yeah.
[00:00:40] Christina: [00:00:40] So, yeah, that was an illusion for anybody out there. This is as we’re recording, this is the last day of the Trump administration, um, which, uh, knock on wood. And I’m literally knocking on wood because. We, I don’t want to tempt fate, but it does seem like we [00:01:00] somehow, barely. And I do mean barely got out of this, um, without like nuclear apocalypse.
[00:01:09] Brett: [00:01:09] It does feel like a close call. Uh, where are we at with like the violence predictions right now?
[00:01:18] Christina: [00:01:18] Uh, the FBI and people are on it. So I think that there are still some predictions, but I don’t think, I think at this point, a lot of people are spooked. If that makes any sense, like I’m not expecting. There to be a huge anti protest on Wednesday, but I don’t think anybody knows. And the only reason I’m not expecting that is because they literally have, um, police officers going and getting right gear and stuff from hotel lobbies in DC.
[00:01:50] Like
[00:01:51] Brett: [00:01:51] Don’t they have like tens of thousands of national guard troops deployed in DC. Now
[00:01:56] Christina: [00:01:56] Exactly exactly. It’s like, Oh, it only took an insurgency for [00:02:00] you to actually, you know, listen to what these people are saying that they’re going to do and, and, and beefing up security around this stuff. It only took that. Um, so, so I feel like to me, it’s Danny with, with faint praise, you know what I mean?
[00:02:15] It’s like, it’s kind of like, The TSA is a terrible institution, but it took nine 11 for airports to actually like, do anything about security, you know,
[00:02:26] Brett: [00:02:26] Yeah. To at, to at least have some security theater, I suppose.
[00:02:30] Christina: [00:02:30] Yeah. And, and in some cases they have actually copyable, like, I don’t think enough to like, be able to justify some of the more egregious TSA rules having said that like other countries have taken on stuff too.
[00:02:42] And, and yeah. At least have a security theater with it. You know what I mean? But I think of anything else, like the theater probably does scare some of your less like zealous people from, from doing it because they’re like. Well, I’m going to get caught, you know? Um,
[00:02:58] Brett: [00:02:58] a word. Is [00:03:00] it zealous or is it, is it zealous when you’re referring to a zealot?
[00:03:04] Christina: [00:03:04] I think it’s selfless when you’re referring to
[00:03:06] Brett: [00:03:06] If it’s not a word it is now
[00:03:08] Christina: [00:03:08] I pretty sure that it zealous as a word Buzzell. Cause zealous, I think is the, is the adjective Andela this would be like the adverb.
[00:03:16] Brett: [00:03:16] of zealots. Yes. Anyway, I do. Yeah. I do think, I think that theater discourages, well, it discourages me, like if I ever had a thought of.
[00:03:27] Christina: [00:03:27] Right,
[00:03:28] Brett: [00:03:28] anything dastardly, like I’m, I don’t even, I think you’re allowed to have like a blade under like three inches or something like a fingernail Clippers, things like that.
[00:03:39] Like, I don’t even try, like,
[00:03:41] Christina: [00:03:41] No, totally.
[00:03:42] Brett: [00:03:42] I bought the, the Gerber artifact without the Exacto blade on it. I’m adding the Gerber artifact to our show notes because that’s the coolest thing ever. No, not ever. I’m sure there anyway, you’ll see. Follow the link in the show notes.
[00:04:00] [00:03:59] Christina: [00:03:59] Yeah, no, same with me, although I like, I’ve never really, you know, I, um, I’ve traveled with scissors before and sometimes like that has been compensated, whatever, which fine. But, um, the, the big thing with me is it’s always been like, Oh, well, I’m certainly not traveling with drugs through the airport. Um, although that is remarkably easy as well.
[00:04:21] From what I understand, I don’t know. I’ve I’ve, I’ve I’ve
[00:04:24] Brett: [00:04:24] want to, you want to hear a story
[00:04:27] Christina: [00:04:27] I do want to hear a story.
[00:04:28] Brett: [00:04:28] nine 11, but it was an international flight because I was going to Canada and. I was like, this is the middle of my heroin addiction. And I didn’t know if I would be able to score in, I think we’re going to, I don’t even remember. Um, but I wasn’t sure I would be able to, to stay high.
[00:04:51] And so I spent a hundred dollars on a, like a bottle of just like every [00:05:00] possible, uh, pill that a junkie could want. Um, uppers and downers and relaxing and like unlabeled too. Like, I didn’t even know what half the self wise it was to kind of like take the blue one if you’re feeling this. And like the guy that sold it to me gave me crazy instructions.
[00:05:18] Anyway, I didn’t, I didn’t know how much trouble I would get in for having pills that weren’t in a bottle with my name on them. So I wrapped the whole thing up in saran wrap and put it, you know, Where you would, um, I’ll just say it. I put it on my butt and I went through customs with all that in my butt, went through the x-ray machine, scared shitless that I was going to get caught because I was paranoid.
[00:05:48] Anyway, I’m on drugs. I’m paranoid. And I, I made it. It was no problem. I have to say having been through that experience, I do think it would be really easy to get a fair amount of [00:06:00] drugs through TSA.
[00:06:03] Christina: [00:06:03] Yeah. Um, at this point I’ve accidentally gone through, I think with edibles before which whatever, and that stuff like looks like any sort of other matters. So if it’s not, you know, in, um, Like containers that outwardly say that their drugs, if they were to go through your stuff, like, you know, it would be difficult.
[00:06:23] But yeah. I tend to think that you’re right. Although there’s a certain amount of profiling too, right? Like I was paranoid because when I went to Dubai, I was coming from Europe and I, um, cause I flew from. I think it was an Amsterdam. Um, but I might’ve been in Stockholm nose and Stockholm. So I went from like Stockholm to Dubai, I believe.
[00:06:49] And, um, or, or maybe it was Amsterdam and then Stockholm was later. Anyway, I flew from like one place to another, and I had my DEXA [00:07:00] during with me and. I was like really concerned that they were going to like arrest me or do something to me for having a controlled substance and you buy and like, and I did all the research, but it’s really unclear there in terms of like what you can bring in and what you can’t.
[00:07:14] I had a doctor’s note. I had like the prescriptions, like I had, like, everything that I thought was, was allowed, but I was also like severely freaked out that they were going to go through my medication or, or whatever. So I invoked the ultimate, like. Protection, which is white privilege. And I paid, I don’t know, like $200 or something for the concierge service where they meet you at the plane, and then they take you in a golf cart too.
[00:07:48] Um, a waiting area where I like had a, uh, a drink non-alcoholic cause it was during, um, Ramadan, um, and uh, watched some TV. I [00:08:00] remember this is when the first impeachment was happening. Someone went and got my bag for me. Then I had my own private, like x-ray thing, which, because I was being hand walked in by someone.
[00:08:12] I don’t even know if they looked at the screen. Then I was taken to another lounge where I waited for my chauffer, who then took me to my hotel.
[00:08:20] Brett: [00:08:20] All because you were worried, they would take your Dexedrine away.
[00:08:24] Christina: [00:08:24] I wasn’t worried. They take my Dexedrine away. I was worried. I’d get arrested for having to exit train, and then I’d be in like, and then I’d be in a Muslim country. Like that. That was my concern. I was like, okay, if I can’t have it, I can’t have it fine. But, um, but, but there was a very real concern because again, I was going from like one country to another.
[00:08:44] Like, I didn’t want to be without it for like two weeks.
[00:08:47] Brett: [00:08:47] We, we started talking about Trump and we got to like drug drugs in TSA in like one paragraph, basically.
[00:08:56] Christina: [00:08:56] We did. You know why? Because I’m just ready to be done.
[00:08:58] Brett: [00:08:58] Yeah. So here’s the thing [00:09:00] about that. Um, I am, I am allowing myself today to actually feel relief. Like, I like, I’ve always tempered, like, yeah, Trump’s done, but he’s not really going to go away. Here’s the state of, uh, like the right and, and, uh, and like white power and terrorism and none of this is going to change.
[00:09:23] And I don’t like Biden all that much. I don’t have high hopes for the new administration, but I’m letting go of all that right now. And just. Just feeling the relief that we’re so close to just being done with Trump.
[00:09:38] Christina: [00:09:38] I, yeah, no, I’m I’m with you. And although, you know, I’m kind, I, I come around on Biden a lot just because I think that, I dunno, I feel like it’s what we need right now. We need somebody who is competent and who, um, can hopefully get some stuff done, right? Like,
[00:09:57] Brett: [00:09:57] yeah. Now, now that we have the [00:10:00] Senate, I do have hopes that maybe even we can push some more progressive legislation. I it’ll be an uphill battle, but the possibility is at least there
[00:10:12] Christina: [00:10:12] No. Totally, totally. And, and, um, I don’t know. I get tired. When, like we do this on the left where we eat our own and I get it. I do, I, I understand the impulse, but I’m also at a certain point. I’m like, can we like not, can we just celebrate the fact that this asshole is gone?
[00:10:31] Brett: [00:10:31] yeah, I never really celebrated. Uh, Biden’s victory to begin with for the aforementioned reasons. But tonight, tonight, I will have, uh, a fake beer and salute democracy working.
[00:10:48] Christina: [00:10:48] Yeah, seriously. Um, and although, you know, barely again, because it almost didn’t, um,
[00:10:55] Brett: [00:10:55] But like the, the, the loops that [00:11:00] democracy had to go through this year. Kind of gives me faith in the strength of our institutions that they could withstand an all out like onslaught of, uh, basically attempts to undermine democracy and our institutions withstood it. And that, that I have a little more faith now than I actually did before we, you know, Trump.
[00:11:29] So, you know, plus side.
[00:11:33] Christina: [00:11:33] No. I, I agree with that. I, um, I think it’s, it’s, it’s been sort of a relief that the system did work because I think, I mean, a lot of, a lot of places look to us, not just, you know, because not that we’re the, I don’t think we’re the oldest democracy. I think there might be some that are older, but like we, you know, like if, if it, if our, if our experiment failed, like the way that our Republic works failed, like that would be [00:12:00] a negative harbinger for democracy in general.
[00:12:04] And, and it’s a relief that, that, again, knock on wood like that hasn’t happened.
[00:12:09] Brett: [00:12:09] Uh, if I watch a lot of, um, socialist and along with all my aunt or, uh, atheist, YouTube that I watch, I watched a lot of socialist stuff and, um, they always talk about, uh, how us is supposed to be like the shining, the Paragon of democracy. And we don’t actually live in a democracy. I mean, if anything, we’re like, we’re run by corporations, people.
[00:12:36] It’s not one vote, one person, one vote, and we don’t really have the say that we think we do. Um, all that said though. Yeah, I’m still feeling pretty good about our democracy right now.
[00:12:50] Christina: [00:12:50] Yeah. I mean, look, it’s not, it’s not perfect, but it’s, it’s better than most of the other systems. Um, and, um, yeah, so.
[00:13:00] [00:13:00] Brett: [00:13:00] So, uh, I, I did, uh, I have, uh, a bot that I’ve probably mentioned before in our discord that tells us what our topics for the day are going to be. It’s that little dice rolling app that I wrote a macro for
[00:13:13] Christina: [00:13:13] Yeah, I, I saw, I saw that I saw that it were politics, religion, TV, and of course, Taylor
[00:13:19] Brett: [00:13:19] Yes. I have a separate, I have a separate bot that tells me whether we have to talk about Taylor Swift or not. And I will, I will say I had it phrased so that it doesn’t say we have to talk about Taylor. It just says, sure. Go ahead and talk about Taylor. So we have permission to talk about Taylor Swift. W w we’ll see if we get there.
[00:13:40] Christina: [00:13:40] Well, we’ll see if we get there, but, uh, but we’ve covered politics. We’ve got a little bit into religion. Do you want to do an, add a read before we talk more about, um,
[00:13:50] Brett: [00:13:50] Yeah, we have three sponsors today. We should have talked about what order we were going to do them in.
[00:13:55] Christina: [00:13:55] I think just go on the order of the
[00:13:57] Brett: [00:13:57] Okay. That means it’s your turn. Tell us all [00:14:00] about ritual multivitamins.
[00:14:02] Christina: [00:14:02] Yeah. So this episode is brought to you by ritual, and you might be surprised to learn that multivitamins can contain sugars, synthetic fillers, artificial colorants nuts a minute, not to mention animal byproducts like sheep’s wool or gelatin from hooves and hides, but ritual. Isn’t your typical multivitamin.
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[00:14:41] It’s non-GMO it’s gluten and allergen-free it’s really great. I really like the convenience of ritual and my vitamins show up at my doorstep every month. And all I have to do is pop two in the morning. And then I know that I filled my nutrient gap in my diet. It’s super, super convenient, especially for [00:15:00] someone like me who has the palette of a five-year-old and doesn’t always get my nutrients otherwise.
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[00:15:33] Brett: [00:15:33] That was an amazing read. Nice job.
[00:15:37] Christina: [00:15:37] Thank you. Thank you. And thank you, ritual. Um, I, I I’m I’m I’m going to chalk it up to the vitamins for
[00:15:42] Brett: [00:15:42] really? You’re really on the ball. All right. So we can, we, can, we have a couple other politics topics we could hit, but we have a long list today. So do you want to do TV or religion?
[00:15:58] Christina: [00:15:58] Well, you were kind of talking [00:16:00] about religion. Um, With the last thing, it kind of came up a little bit. So maybe let’s just finish on that and then we can go
[00:16:07] Brett: [00:16:07] so here’s my, here’s my religion topic. And I’m going to talk about this because I know my mom doesn’t listen to this show. Um, however, my mom and I are friends on Facebook and, uh, she posted. A poster a little, it’s not a meme. It’s like actually a picture of a poster that says, don’t worry about tomorrow.
[00:16:28] God is already there. And I had to stop myself from commenting. I just wanted to say, is this the same God that invented COVID and the AIDS crisis is this the same God that is responsible for infant mortality rates and. Uh, it took a lot, like I kept going back to it. I kept actually like loading up, like clicking in the comment field and then walking away like three times.
[00:17:00] [00:17:00] I just, I don’t, I guess I don’t really want to have that conversation.
[00:17:06] Christina: [00:17:06] No, uh, it’s to me, there’s no point in making a comment like that. It’s not going to make you feel any better. It’s not going to make her feel any better. You’re not going to agree to it. It’s just going to be a pithy, like, frankly kind of shitty thing for you to say that, like, you’ll be like, ha ha look at how much smarter I am than you, but like, it’s not going to change anything.
[00:17:24] So I think those are good things where I’m glad you bit your tongue it’s like, say it on the pod, tweet it. Right, exactly. That’s what I’m saying. Like, these are things that we can, like, you can always choose cause. I I used to, especially when I was younger and better about it now, uh, although, I mean, I still get myself into trouble, but I’m significantly better about it now.
[00:17:44] Uh, people think I don’t have a filter and I’m like, Oh no, you have no idea. Like how much I’m actually
[00:17:49] Brett: [00:17:49] Can hear the things I’m not saying.
[00:17:52] Christina: [00:17:52] Exactly. But I think about it. I’m like, what’s the value in this and on Facebook, that’s actually one of the reasons I’m not on Facebook a lot [00:18:00] is I’m like, What am I adding to this discourse?
[00:18:03] Is anything actually going to like, come from this? Um, I got sent apparently some hate, uh, Instagram messages from people who were mad about me. Um, like with the QCAT guy. And, and, and, and some of them were invoking God. So this fits into both our religion and our politics segment. And it was so funny because I don’t allow, like, I screen messages before anybody can kind of like send something to me.
[00:18:32] And so I obviously didn’t approve this, this message that came through and I just kind of laughed at it. And I was like, I got like two of them. And I’m like, why would you send this to a stranger? Like, you’re going to seek me out on Instagram. So that you can tell me that I’m a godless liberal Haven who knows nothing about technology or science.
[00:18:55] And I’m like, okay. Um, [00:19:00] right, exactly. I’m like, yes, I’m, I’m, I’m, I’m a godless heathen liberal, but like also, like, does this make you feel better? Like what, what are you getting out of this hall? Like shows her and I’m like, no, I don’t really care.
[00:19:14] Brett: [00:19:14] feel like comments like that actually come from a place of passion though.
[00:19:21] Christina: [00:19:21] I mean, I think passion, but it’s also, you can be passionate and still be stupid.
[00:19:25] Brett: [00:19:25] absolutely. I’m not saying there’s any justification for saying it, but like making a snide comment as an atheist, uh, is just purely, um, uh, condescending. Whereas coming out and being truly angry at someone for stuff they posted and calling them ignorant and stupid, like that actually comes from more than just haughtiness.
[00:19:51] Christina: [00:19:51] No, I would agree with that. Um, although, I mean, I think that there’s, there’s probably a certain amount of, of like, if you actually were to comment, which you [00:20:00] didn’t, I think that there would be like something you could say. Yeah, I was passionate about this and this anchored me enough that I had to actually, you know, I didn’t, I, I didn’t have self restraint.
[00:20:12] Anyway. I’m glad you had restraint because.
[00:20:15] Brett: [00:20:15] The question, uh, can God make a Boulder big enough that. He can’t lift it. Uh, it actually is part of a whole, like a logical fallacy analysis. And I really kind of want to pose it. Like, not just academically. I want to pose it to my parents because I’m curious how they.
[00:20:39] Christina: [00:20:39] They would say faith. They, they, they, they, they would have faith. I mean, that’s the answer and, and that’s, that’s ultimately the thing, right? I think that’s ultimately the thing that separates people who believe in people who don’t. And I, I grew up with faith and I grew up, you know, people who have that and.
[00:20:54] I haven’t been able to excise all of it completely from my life. Like, I, I I’m agnostic, but [00:21:00] I don’t deny that there could be some greater being out there for me though. Faith came down to a comfort thing and, you know, are you getting something positive out of this or not? And for me at a, at a point in my life and I, I chronically, I think it was with sort of the Boulder thing, cause I’d always believed.
[00:21:16] It was like, God will, I was always taught to believe and I’d always believe like, God will never give you more than you can handle. And when I was 15 years old, I had more than I could handle. And, you know, it caused this very like emo angsty on we existential crisis of me where I ended up, you know, like not believing in an organized religion and, and going through various things between like, am I full on, you know, atheist or agnostic?
[00:21:47] Or where am I, and the analysis I’ve done with it, at least in my opinion, is that. And how I’ve tried to explain it to my mom is I’m like, I don’t find comfort in this. This [00:22:00] doesn’t give me what it’s supposed to for a lot of people. I think that the faith gives them a comfort that there’s something bigger out there and that is worthwhile.
[00:22:08] And I don’t discount anybody for doing that. But if you have that, no, like logical explanation is ever going to,
[00:22:19] Brett: [00:22:19] Right. Well, and I, I’m not suggesting that posing the question would change their mind, but the very, like the basic ideas that. If God, uh, can create a bowl, if he can create a Boulder so heavy, it can’t lift it, then he’s not all powerful. And if he can create a Boulder, he’s so heavy, he can’t lift, but then
[00:22:38] Christina: [00:22:38] Right then he can’t, if he’s not doing, he’s not. Right. I mean, and I think that what, I don’t know, I don’t know what people would say. I think, because again, it’s logical policy. I think you probably have people who would say he could, but he was.
[00:22:52] Brett: [00:22:52] Yeah, I would. I just, I’m curious. I’m curious what approach they would take. I’ve probably said this before, but it was, [00:23:00] uh, I didn’t like feeling bad about masturbating as a kid, and that was enough to make me. Start leaving the church. Like it just didn’t make sense to
[00:23:12] Christina: [00:23:12] No. I mean, that makes we’ll know that. And I think that, that makes sense. Right? You, you felt guilt about something that you didn’t think you should feel guilty about. And so you evaluated like, well, should I stop this behavior? That makes me feel good. And that is natural. And you know, it has all these other things.
[00:23:27] Or should I investigate, like what is telling me that this is wrong and, and when you start asking those questions, That becomes a lot deeper. And for me, like, I was never somebody who was like, all about, like, I’d always been aware of, um, a lot of the fallacies within like the Bible and other religious texts themselves, you know, because they, they were, they were written by man.
[00:23:53] And, and so, you know, it was kind of like taught that they’re like imperfect. I wasn’t raised in the sort
[00:23:58] Brett: [00:23:58] See, I was raised [00:24:00] as a Bible literalist.
[00:24:02] Christina: [00:24:02] Right. Totally. And, and I was not, uh, although I did go to school with some people who were like, you know, super Baptist, like Bible literalist, and, and those were people that even when I was what I would consider very spiritual, you know, whatnot, I was like, not into that.
[00:24:17] I was like, okay, like, there’s there, there there’s faith, which I get. And then there’s also just like straight up, you know, like ignoring, like. Reality, you know,
[00:24:31] Brett: [00:24:31] literally is super easy to pick apart. Like it does not hold up. Uh, if, if you look at it as a bunch of parables and a bunch of kind of concepts. Yeah, you can, you can, you can explain it all the way with just faith. But if you’re saying that Noah actually had, you know, dinosaurs on an arc.
[00:24:51] And that the entire kingdom of Judah sprang up from one family that survived the flood. And [00:25:00] then within like three generations, there were 10,000 of them. Like it’s super easy to pull apart the, the kind of facts of this stories. Um, it can’t, it’s just, you can’t take it literally.
[00:25:14] Christina: [00:25:14] Well, no, I mean, and then the more you look into things about like what texts were omitted and changed and why they were and what the clergy did. And, and, and I mean, and this is not just true of Christianity. This is true of Judaism. This is true of Islam as it’s true of, um, you know, like, um, uh, Hindu, like this is true of if anything and, and it’s, but the interesting thing is there are certain like historical facts that are there.
[00:25:37] Like there was a great flood. Uh, you know, they’re like, because every religion has like references to it and, and there ha there were certain world events that happen, but it doesn’t mean that everything that was written in those, those books is, is accurate, right? Like,
[00:25:54] Brett: [00:25:54] church, they taught us, there was geological evidence for a worldwide flood that is in [00:26:00] fact incorrect.
[00:26:01] Christina: [00:26:01] right. No, there wasn’t a rule by flood, but there was a great flood, like yeah. That that’s like. I think at this point, I think they’ve historically proven that. And I think that the fact that it exists in so many different texts that are even something stuffs up that isn’t religious, like it’s proof that like, it wasn’t as all encompassing as maybe it was made out to be, but it was like a big event, right?
[00:26:23] Like that was something that it was passed down, but that has some basis, like, it didn’t just appear out of thin air, the whole, you know, arc thing. No, but. The fact that there was, you know, that, that seems like that’s something that somebody came up with as a, as an explanation for how did we survive and why are the animals here?
[00:26:42] Brett: [00:26:42] Exactly. It’s a story that was used to explain. Yeah. Yeah. Did you know there was a gospel of Judas?
[00:26:50] Christina: [00:26:50] I did,
[00:26:51] Brett: [00:26:51] you know how weird it got?
[00:26:53] Christina: [00:26:53] uh, I
[00:26:54] Brett: [00:26:54] There was this whole, I can’t remember the, uh, the kind of. The name of the [00:27:00] sect that, uh, believed this, but it, it, it kind of laid out this idea that, uh, the God that the God Yahweh was actually one of several gods and he was kind of a, a bad, a bad God.
[00:27:15] And there was a, uh, a God higher than him that could not be named. And, uh, Uh, Judas Jesus had actually been sent by the higher God to save people from Yahweh. And, um, I’m, I’m paraphrasing and trying to remember how this all went together, but there’s actually a lot of, kind of, um, uh, th things that actually made it into the Bible that seem to have come from this particular ideology.
[00:27:49] And, uh, and things were changed, uh, uh, , uh, low Elohime, uh, like, uh, there are, there are references in the [00:28:00] original, uh, Jewish texts that actually are plural gods instead of just God. And the, the shift from polytheism and monotheism was kind of. Half-assed and a lot of the biblical texts, it gets crazy. Uh, there’s so many weird things going on that I, I would be hard pressed to put them all together intelligently, but if you ever want to go down a YouTube rabbit hole, look up,
[00:28:27] Christina: [00:28:27] will
[00:28:27] Brett: [00:28:27] up like dead sea scrolls, look up the
[00:28:30] Christina: [00:28:30] Oh yeah. The dead sea scrolls stuff is the, yeah, I was gonna say, uh, the, the gospel of Judas, according to Wikipedia is a Gnostic gospel. Um, but, uh, an English translation was published in 2006. Um, and it was, um, unveiled by. Um, a team at a Vanderbilt university’s divinity school, which that’s interesting to me because a lot of times like the dead sea schools and some of this stuff comes from people who let’s just say have less credibility in religious [00:29:00] studies.
[00:29:00] Right. Uh, uh, I would say that that Vanderbilt divinity school has credibility. So that’s interesting to me that, that, um, they were, you know, like responsible for unveiling the work. At least according to this. That’s
[00:29:17] Brett: [00:29:17] I mean a lot of that stuff, you could unveil it in a very, uh, academic way. I mean, you’re talking about like, we’re, we’re revealing what one sect of Christianity believed
[00:29:27] Christina: [00:29:27] no, no, exactly. And, and that’s what I’m talking about. I’m just saying like some of the stuff, like, obviously the dead sea scrolls and stuff like that exists, but it becomes co-opted by like conspiracy theorist type things, you know what I mean? Whereas this has some academic basis, um, which, which is
[00:29:42] Brett: [00:29:42] man. Have you ever followed the, uh, Taylor Swift Illuminati means,
[00:29:47] Christina: [00:29:47] I have, I have rabbit hole, although I think the bigger one is Beyonce and the Illuminati.
[00:29:53] Brett: [00:29:53] Oh, I’ll have to look that up.
[00:29:55] Christina: [00:29:55] Yeah. She’s like, she’s, she’s like the center of it, honestly. [00:30:00] Uh, and then her whole thing too, is like, there was the whole, like the thing that she wasn’t actually pregnant with blue Ivy was part of it or there’s, there’s a lot. If you look at Beyonce Illuminati, it’s a
[00:30:13] Brett: [00:30:13] See, I was trying to work. Taylor Swift in early for
[00:30:15] Christina: [00:30:15] I know you are. I know you are. And that was, that was good. Uh, I mean the, the, I think the Taylor Swift Illuminati thing, there was a thing for a while with her where, um, like she didn’t show her belly button for a while, but then that didn’t cease to be true.
[00:30:28] And so people were like, Oh, she doesn’t show her belly button. And so that’s because really there’s some sort of portal to something, you know, like her she’s hiding some sort of lizard stuff,
[00:30:38] Brett: [00:30:38] about as much sense as Q and Anya.
[00:30:41] Christina: [00:30:41] Completely. Um, I’m going to link, uh, put a, put a link in here to the bizarre Beyonce conspiracy theory explained from Forbes because that’s what Forbes does now.
[00:30:55] Uh,
[00:30:57] Brett: [00:30:57] This episode going really well or really horribly, [00:31:00] I can’t even tell.
[00:31:01] Christina: [00:31:01] I think it’s going really well. I think it’s going really well. Also, you P we had on there, the, the MyPillow guy, which good stuff, and. Um, I noticed on Twitter that my pillow has been dropped from a Wayfair Kohl’s and bed bath, and beyond have severed ties with my pillow CEO, Mike Lindell, because of his ties to president Trump, including recent comments about a stolen election and suggestions of martial law.
[00:31:28] Brett: [00:31:28] That was kind of a big deal. And then dominion voting machines is suing him for, I assume, liable.
[00:31:36] Christina: [00:31:36] Yeah, no, totally. And the thing is like libel cases are pretty hard to win in the United States. Uh, I think this is going to be pretty easy and it’s interesting too, that news organizations, uh, primarily Fox, but also OAN and I think Newsmax have had to issue. Updates and corrections of sword on the air to prevent being sued, which is really [00:32:00] notable.
[00:32:00] Cause the thing is, is like, okay, you can go after this, this Mike Lindell, uh, guy or whatever, because fine. Um, you know, he’s got a lot of money, but he probably doesn’t have, you know, he doesn’t have like the resources of, of a, um, a news Corp, right. Um, or, or Fox, whatever the hell they’re called now, since they split off, like he D he doesn’t have Murdock money is what I’m saying.
[00:32:20] Um, but when you’re a news organization, And you have to make a correction like that to escape a libel suit. That’s really telling, like, that’s really telling, um, uh, that, that like, you’re like, yeah, we’re going to lose this, this defamation lawsuit. It’s like, okay, cool. Um, fuck that guy, man. Like, honestly,
[00:32:45] Brett: [00:32:45] I don’t. I don’t understand. Yeah. Yeah, this has been this administration and the people they have brought into the forefront of our consciousness. It’s been appalling and like, I can’t believe some of these people were [00:33:00] ever given a microphone at all. Like they don’t stand up to any test of intelligence or, or a coherence.
[00:33:12] Christina: [00:33:12] No only me. There’s sycophants and, and they’re yes, men and they’re weak, right? I mean, these are the people Trump talked about the best and brightest, but obviously that’s a lie because the best and the brightest have never accepted him. That’s been his whole Griff the whole time. Right? Like the only person in his family who for a brief period of time.
[00:33:32] Was able to achieve like mainstream Acceptibility amongst the actual Leitz was Ivanka. Right. And she’s blown that. Um, but she she’s completely, um, although people want her to run, which is scary, but I also don’t think that’ll happen. But like people are saying like, they want her to run for, uh, against Rubio, um, in, in Florida.
[00:33:55] Um, I don’t think she has any desire to do that. I think that she. Is [00:34:00] regretting like being an enabler to her dad and, and like, and I’m not saying that like she should have, you know, like completely disassociated with her father. Cause like that’s difficult. I mean, even Reagan’s kids who like, did not agree with him at all were at least, you know, I mean, he’s their dad, right?
[00:34:19] Like I think that, that, that, um, Michael Reagan was, was, you know, Might’ve actively protested against some of his father’s policies, but it wasn’t like he was going on TV, like shitting on his father. Right. Like, I can understand that how ever, um, like when you become an enabler and you become complicit with it, you can’t come back from that.
[00:34:45] But the irony I was, I was going to say though, is like, he always was, he was from Queens, right. He wasn’t even from like the good like Burroughs. He was from Queens and his dad had money, but it was new money and he wasn’t accepted by the new boat reach and they [00:35:00] didn’t like him. And, and he was somebody who.
[00:35:03] Kind of, you know, bought his way into being in the room with some people who were powerful, but were also usually like new money Grifters, like the actual social elites, like the people that, you know, you and I will never associate with, but like that exists out there, like the Vanderbilts and you know, like the, like, frankly like the Anderson Cooper’s of the world, right?
[00:35:22] Like we’d never touch him. And that’s the thing. So who is he going to have as his hangers on? Because the actual powerful people, they might. Pony up to him and try to see if they can Curry some favor, because that’s what you do. But the people who are actually going to be like the Zelda’s like fans of his are going to be people who have somehow managed to make money in some ways, but don’t have any respectability or, you know, like the Kotlin or these people who, as you said, like should never have been given the time of day.
[00:35:55] And because. They’re the ones who were really looking at him. They’re like, Oh [00:36:00] yeah, he’s great. And everybody else is like, no, he’s like a low class loser whose dad happened to have a lot of money. Like who cares? You know, like he, he, he’s a guy that was like doing ads for pizza hut and like licensed his name to steak, sold at freaking sharper image.
[00:36:18] Like, you know what I mean? Like which,
[00:36:22] Brett: [00:36:22] a, he’s a fake, he’s a phony and everyone who’s, anyone knows that. So
[00:36:27] Christina: [00:36:27] Yes, exactly
[00:36:28] Brett: [00:36:28] that believe that Hugo Chavez is orchestrating.
[00:36:33] Christina: [00:36:33] precisely. Right. And, and, and Italy is somehow doing the sunlight. I’m like, yeah. Italy wishes that they were smart enough to be able to co-op this election, Italy has bigger economic and other problems right now is like, yes, this is what Italy is doing. Italy known place of, of masterminds. Of computer intelligence, Italy, like, and I’m not shitting on Italy here.
[00:36:56] I’m just saying like that. That’s not how this [00:37:00] works. You know what I mean? It’s like, Hmm. What, what country would be involved potentially in trying to have influence on a U S election? Is it a democratic country? Um, in, you know, uh, Europe that has some financial, you know, problems
[00:37:18] Brett: [00:37:18] wait, wait, I know this it’s it’s um, it’s Russia.
[00:37:23] Christina: [00:37:23] I was going to say, is it, is it, you know, maybe it’s kind of Mediterranean place or is it like a place where, you know, you have very smart people who have a propensity for espionage who also have, you know, massive ties to, you know, computer forensics and that sort of thing. Like, and the two places that you really well, I guess three, really, we kind of like the Russian area, Ukraine, things like that.
[00:37:47] And. Um, you know, parts of Asia, like, so, so China, um, uh, Korea, uh, a bit like those are gonna be your main targets of where you would actually have both governments. [00:38:00] And, and, and frankly, the United States, right? Like we, we could certainly do it to another country, but like, those are going to be your areas where, I mean, I guess suppose anything’s possible, but if you’re talking about a state sponsored action, like I think anybody who lives in a lot of European countries, again, I would much rather live in Europe than the United States right now, but I don’t think anybody’s looking at that being like, yeah, Our, our state is completely capable of interfering in an election happening in the United States, by breaking into voting machines, using zero day things and other methods to get into air gaps of systems so that we can, um, transparently alter the results without any evidence actually existing.
[00:38:43] And with the paper counts, aligning with, with what our data says,
[00:38:48] Brett: [00:38:48] To be fair, to be fair. Uh, Russia’s 2016 interference was not a direct hack of the voting system, but rather
[00:38:58] Christina: [00:38:58] it wasn’t.
[00:39:00] [00:38:59] Brett: [00:38:59] public opinion campaign. If you will. Which a lot of, a lot of countries could pull off. India could pull it
[00:39:07] Christina: [00:39:07] they could, uh,
[00:39:11] Brett: [00:39:11] Yeah. I mean, all you really
[00:39:12] Christina: [00:39:12] they could pull it up.
[00:39:13] Brett: [00:39:13] farm full of trolls and there’s
[00:39:15] Christina: [00:39:15] No, here’s the thing. Here’s the thing. I think India could pull it off in India. I don’t think India could pull it up in America.
[00:39:21] Brett: [00:39:21] America can’t even pull it off in America.
[00:39:24] Christina: [00:39:24] I agree. But, but yet Russia and Macedonia, frankly, it wasn’t really rushed. A lot of it came from Macedonia other things. I mean, the thing is, is that like you have to find out like, is there, is there money involved? Um, but yeah, no. I mean, Russia did the disinformation campaigns, which is the. Again, I think proves the fallacy of all of this, like the voting machines.
[00:39:44] We’re, we’re we’re, um, you know, hacked method. It’s like, okay, you’re talking about where some of your most elite, like cyber forensic experts would be, and they opted not to hack these machines, but were so easy to hack them. Why wouldn’t they hack them [00:40:00] instead they opt to do what would arguably be more difficult and certainly take longer and a lot more effort. Which is to do the disinformation campaign, right? Like yet, yet that’s the vector. So to me, that just says, okay, that was the one that they termed more viable if they wanted to interfere rather than hacking machines themselves. And I’m not even in favor of electronic voting machines. Like I have a lot of issues with them.
[00:40:28] Um, I’m not opposed to, you know, obviously using computers to count. We’ve done that for. Before actual computers as we note them even existed. I mean, that’s like literally, I think the whole point of a computer is to help count and coli things, but you know what I mean? Like literally it’s in the name, uh, compute, it just occurred to me.
[00:40:48] But, uh, so, so like, um, I’m, I’m all about having like, discussions about some of these systems and certainly there’ve been very insecure, local voting systems. I’m not talking about the voting machines themselves, but I’m talking about the [00:41:00] registration things and some other stuff that have given. Many of us who are on the left, like pause for concern.
[00:41:08] The one thing that does bother me is that in our like, Ferber to defend the results of the election, which I think is important, I don’t want it to turn into a referendum being like, Oh yes, all of these, um, you know, electronic voting machines are completely like above reproach and we shouldn’t be looking at any of the security issues or any of the stuff involved in that at all,
[00:41:29] Brett: [00:41:29] you, did you read Wired’s article, uh, over the summer on, uh, like the future of voting machines?
[00:41:38] Christina: [00:41:38] Yeah, I did.
[00:41:39] Brett: [00:41:39] they, they ran, uh, hackathons. At like Def con and came up with like a blockchain based voting systems that like sound really good. Really cool. And truly beyond reproach, I would love to see something like that happen.
[00:41:58] Christina: [00:41:58] No. I agree with you. [00:42:00] And I think, I think the, the, the challenge for me, and this is, I mean, I don’t know how you solve it, cause it is one of the things that blockchain might actually be the way to do it. Um, but the, the challenges that you want. Understandably, you need to have, you know, a certain amount of, of, um, uh, secrecy involved in some of the coding and whatnot, but it also becomes a black box.
[00:42:23] And when you can’t investigate the stuff itself, I think that becomes a problem. Um, I dunno, my, my, my personal fear has always been, and this is, this is just like me being honest is not so much that I don’t have faith that, um, the machines could be secured and that people could look into the systems and like, determine whether they’re flaws or not.
[00:42:43] Where I lack the faith is that anyone in our government has those skills, like, like, I feel like people in, in private, um, industry could certainly do that. Those people usually aren’t going to be, um, I mean, maybe you could have a really expensive government [00:43:00] contract to do that, but like people who work at government, especially state and local governments, like don’t have the skills and you can’t afford to hire the people
[00:43:07] Brett: [00:43:07] also you don’t, you don’t in a case like that you need true impartiality and hiring an outside company. Like. I would take some, if you were going to convince, because a lot of it is about convincing people, not, not the technical aspect of it, but the, to convince people that it’s, it’s trustworthy because people who people on the other side couldn’t have, couldn’t have made this change.
[00:43:37] Couldn’t have affected it the other side, the others. Yeah. So, uh, W w man we’ve hit politics hard, but according to the rules, we still have to hit TV.
[00:43:52] Christina: [00:43:52] We sure do. Um, let’s, let’s do another, a sponsor
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[00:45:57] Christina: [00:45:57] Nailed it love Headspace.
[00:46:00] [00:45:59] Brett: [00:45:59] So we can make TV fast.
[00:46:02] Christina: [00:46:02] Yeah, totally. So.
[00:46:04] Brett: [00:46:04] have you seen, have you seen, um, a history of swearing?
[00:46:09] Christina: [00:46:09] I have not, uh, that’s the one with the Nicki Glasser and, um,
[00:46:14] Brett: [00:46:14] What’s got a panel, but it’s hosted, it’s hosted by Nicholas cage. Um, but both of those people do it. It’s like a panel show the way like, uh, Uh, worst president ever that I can’t think of another example, but yeah, there’s one host and then they kind of do like a confessional style interviews with, with different people.
[00:46:36] Um, I’ve only watched the first one. It was about the F word. And, um, I came away with one interesting tidbit, uh, guess which actor, which a movie actor. Has the record for the most AF bombs, you would think Al Pachino you might think Samuel [00:47:00] Jackson
[00:47:01] Christina: [00:47:01] Yep.
[00:47:01] Brett: [00:47:01] Jonah Hill. Do you in large part to the Wolf of wall street?
[00:47:08] Christina: [00:47:08] Okay. I was going to say that would probably be it, but that’s still so interesting.
[00:47:14] Brett: [00:47:14] Yeah, I thought so too. It was quite the revelation. Yeah.
[00:47:18] Christina: [00:47:18] Okay. Although, you know what, this makes sense though. Cause it’s from a Scorsese film, so okay. At least, at least, at least that is why
[00:47:24] Brett: [00:47:24] without that though, he says, fuck a lot.
[00:47:28] Christina: [00:47:28] totally okay. Totally. But if it was all those wall street that put them over, then that’s what score says he films. So. Uh, but he does say fuck a lot. So well done Jonah Hill.
[00:47:40] Brett: [00:47:40] There’s your badge of honor, but, uh, but I’m going to watch more episodes. It was it’s basically why you don’t learn a lot other than trivia. Uh, but they do go into like, like people, there’s all these mythologies around, uh, the origin of, of the word. [00:48:00] Fuck. And. Um, like the whole thing about it being a foreign under the consent of the King or for unlawful carnal knowledge.
[00:48:08] Like none of that is true. And it goes through like the first times it appeared in writing and its origins and all of that. It’s, it’s, it’s fun. I, it, we like to swear. I thought maybe, uh, maybe you’d be into it.
[00:48:23] Christina: [00:48:23] Oh, I definitely into it. And I’m I’m, I I’m now want to watch this because I was clearly wrong. But when I was in ninth grade, I. Drop something on my foot and I exclaimed fuck in class. And, uh, uh, miss, uh, Westway was, was very Westbrook older of the fuck. Her name was, she sucked. She was not pleased. And she made me write a report on it.
[00:48:48] And what my report basically showed was that it had been used for hundreds of years and basically meant the same thing. Like we used it for which I guess is not true, but that was what my research [00:49:00] at the time, this is before Wikipedia and before, you know, lots of things were available on the internet.
[00:49:04] So I was just going off of what I could find in the library. Um, and, and I certainly wasn’t going through like, you know, a lot of linguistic books and whatnot, because it was a punishment. So that’s
[00:49:18] Brett: [00:49:18] The first time I said, fuck. I was like, I’m probably five. And I had never heard the word. I just had a penchant for replacing letters. And just saying words in funny ways. And I was saying shucks, but with an F and I was just walking around the hubs going off bucks and I got my mouth washed out with soap and I had no idea what I was doing wrong.
[00:49:42] Christina: [00:49:42] You’re like, why, what happened? Um,
[00:49:45] Brett: [00:49:45] with phonetics.
[00:49:48] Christina: [00:49:48] Yeah. Um, I think my older sister taught me
[00:49:52] Brett: [00:49:52] Yeah. I was the oldest I had to learn from friends.
[00:49:58] Christina: [00:49:58] No, that’s usually what happens though, [00:50:00] right? It’s like, you know, this, like one of the right of passages is that like older kids, like teach younger kids, all the bad words.
[00:50:05] Brett: [00:50:05] Yeah. Yeah. I didn’t teach my, like, my house was so religious that like, I didn’t actually say real swear words until probably middle school.
[00:50:18] Christina: [00:50:18] Yeah. I’m the same way. I
[00:50:19] Brett: [00:50:19] I would say like a whole and F you, but that was about as far as it went.
[00:50:25] Christina: [00:50:25] I mean, I would probably, I mean, I thought stuff and I might’ve say like ass or whatever. I might’ve said shit, but certainly not around my parents. I didn’t take the Lord’s name in vain until like high school.
[00:50:34] Brett: [00:50:34] Hmm, I don’t.
[00:50:35] Christina: [00:50:35] Like I said, gosh, I didn’t say, Oh my God, until I was
[00:50:38] Brett: [00:50:38] Yeah, no, probably same, probably same. I don’t even remember the first time. I said, God damn it. But I do remember feeling like I was going to be smote like lightning was going to strike me. Yeah.
[00:50:53] Christina: [00:50:53] Yeah. Yeah, no, for me it was always one of those things. It was like, that was the worst. And then I was like, Oh my God, like, it’s funny because I [00:51:00] went from never seeing God and like, all of my friends did it and I said, gosh, and then to, to not. I had this, I had this friend in college who he refused to curse and he like saw it as some sort of like moral support superiority thing, but yet he would use other words in its place.
[00:51:16] And I’m like, and I would be like, what the fuck is your issue, dude? Like if you don’t want to curse, that’s fine. But if you’re literally just finding a way to get out of using the word, how is that any better? Like,
[00:51:28] Brett: [00:51:28] Yeah. If, if you don’t believe in, gosh, you go to heck,
[00:51:32] Christina: [00:51:32] right?
[00:51:33] Brett: [00:51:33] um,
[00:51:34] Christina: [00:51:34] Like. Well, the, the, the thing that always would get me is that he would like, you know, asterisks the words and conversations and I’m like, okay, if you’re doing that, like you’re using the word.
[00:51:48] You’re just like, it’s just either use a different term for it or don’t use the damn asterisk, like what the hell anyway. Um, okay, so, so I’ll put that on my list. Um, what does it [00:52:00] talk about peacock? Because you are now a peacock subscriber.
[00:52:03] Brett: [00:52:03] so I, I paid for it, but then found out that if I had her next affinity login, I could get it for free. So I’m trying to figure out how to stop paying for it and get that switched over. But what’s confusing me. Like, as, as, as has been mentioned, I was in the middle of going through the office for the third time.
[00:52:23] And all of the sudden the office wasn’t on Netflix anymore. And I wasn’t gonna like stop watching the office. So I had to get peacock, but I thought all summer, they were like, the commercial said free peacock was going to be a free streaming service from NBC. And it clearly is not. So what’s the deal with peacock.
[00:52:49] Christina: [00:52:49] Okay. So some of it is free and the stuff that spree is, some of it is like, Currently airing shows that might be new episodes would basically be similar to stuff that what they’ve had on Hulu and [00:53:00] then some of like the older reruns of stuff. But then they have the four 99 tier, which is where they are.
[00:53:08] They have like the, the new saver, the bell that’s where that is you. Oh, you have it now. So you can watch it over the belt because I actually want to talk about saving the belt. It’s good. I’m sorry, but it’s really good.
[00:53:17] Brett: [00:53:17] you I’m, I’m pretty close to giving it a try.
[00:53:20] Christina: [00:53:20] I I’m just saying, like, I watched a couple of episodes because it’s way better than you would ever expect it to be it’s way better than it deserves. Anyway, I’ve gone on that ramp before, so yeah. So you have like, um, you know, some of those original series that are exclusives and then because they got the office back because it’s an NBC universal show.
[00:53:42] Um, and it was the most popular show on all of Netflix, poof. Uh, they, I think originally the plan was it was going to be free and instead they’re like, Oh, seasons one and two are free. But I think that the, the money people over at Comcast were like, [00:54:00] yeah, you know what? Let’s just charge people for this.
[00:54:04] Because if this was,
[00:54:05] Brett: [00:54:05] I mean, that’s,
[00:54:06] Christina: [00:54:06] it is a good move. I mean, it’s smart.
[00:54:07] Brett: [00:54:07] of the app really?
[00:54:09] Christina: [00:54:09] Honestly it is, and it, but yeah, if you have, um, a Cox or extensity, then you get it for free and then you can pay $5 a month to get the ad free option. And I originally was not going to do the ad free option. Um, and then it took me, I think all the five minutes I was like watching a movie and.
[00:54:32] I will say this. I think that the way that they do ads with movies was really good. Like they front-load them. And so they’re not interrupting your movie for you, which is great. And I really appreciate that, but I was, I was trying to watch something and it was going to be like three minutes worth of stuff.
[00:54:45] And I was like 30 seconds in and I was like, my ADHD has been ruined by commercial free the stuff. And I’m, I’m just, I’m, I’m paying the $5. So that’s, um, [00:55:00] That’s what I did, but, uh, because I already have the, um, the X affinity. Um, but if you, um, if you don’t have, um, X vanity or whatever, and you don’t wanna pay $10 a month, which I agree is kind of expensive then, uh, I think that, you know, the $5 thing is, is fine.
[00:55:19] The other thing you get with, um, The premium plus, which is like the ad free thing is they will let you do select titles offline on mobile, which I guess fine. But the bigger thing for me, this is what’s frustrating. The app is pretty bad. Like the iOS app doesn’t have background play. It doesn’t have picture and picture like it lacks some things that I would think would be pretty basic.
[00:55:45] And what’s frustrating to me about this and like Hulu doesn’t have background play picture, picture anymore either, which is really annoying. But the NBC app has those things, the X Finity app has those things. So that’s what pisses me off. I’m [00:56:00] like, okay, you have an app that like lack some features has some questionable design choices, even though I think the content is actually really strong.
[00:56:07] I think the design choice is really poor, but yet your company has not one, not two, but like multiple apps that have these features that you don’t have in this one, which is like
[00:56:19] Brett: [00:56:19] So it’s, it’s not that you can’t it’s that you won’t.
[00:56:23] Christina: [00:56:23] Right. It’s like that you clearly had another team doing this shit and I’m like, Oh, what are you doing?
[00:56:27] You know? Um, no, I think it’s, I think it’s good. I actually think in terms of their content selection, like I think HBO, max is the best in terms of constant selection, even though it has the worst name and is the most confusing of all of them because of the name. I think that HBO max is like the strongest content library, but I actually think, uh, the, that, um, Peacock has a really good library of both movies and TV shows.
[00:56:54] Brett: [00:56:54] It’s kind of HBO, max is kind of like, um, tofu, you ever buy tofu? [00:57:00] Like tofu. When you go to the grocery store, there may exist like regular tofu, but at most grocery stores it starts with, from tofu and then there’s extra firm tofu, and then there’s like super extra firm tofu. And it makes you wonder why they didn’t just start the scale at tofu.
[00:57:22] Christina: [00:57:22] Yeah. I mean, I, to me, the biggest, the biggest problem with, with HBO max is the name. They clearly wanted to leverage the HBO brand, which makes sense, but it’s now shifted into this other thing and, and what everybody said, which is why, um, um, the, the guy who, um, um, uh, ran HBO for years left, um, um, which was his space, uh, Greenblatt.
[00:57:48] Anyway, the guy who’d been in charge of, um, HBO forever, um, resigned, not long after 18 T bought them Richard Plepler because, uh, he, he didn’t agree with some of the [00:58:00] restructuring and he didn’t agree with John steaky. Who’s now the CEO of, I think, all of at and T, but he had been in charge of Warren media or whatever, basically it was like, Oh, we can make more money out of this.
[00:58:09] Like there was this all hands meeting and. And he was sort of congratulating the HBO people on how great of a job they’ve done. And, and like the fucked up thing here is that literally at and T bought time Warner for HBO, like HBO represented some astronomical percentage of the profit. Of of a time Warner as an entire entity.
[00:58:31] Like it was ridiculous. And it also had this huge unit quality thing and whatnot. And he was like, okay, but we can do more. Now we got to pay off this, you know, E $7 billion. We just paid and, and employees rightfully like, well, you don’t have the money to buy us. And we were already making bank, like, why are you trying to change our business model?
[00:58:51] And you’re like, well, we can do more. But that the fear that, that, um, um, uh, Plepler had. Was it, they would dilute the HBO brand. And that’s exactly what they’re doing, [00:59:00] which is a shame, because I think the service is just really good, but the name is terrible. It’s confusing as all get out to people. Cause people don’t even know like it’s so dumb.
[00:59:12] They had this weird add on percentage thing. Like they show like how many HBO subscribers have converted to HBO max and the number of people who have HBO max, but don’t even know they have HBO. Max is like staggering. But anyway, back to peacock. Um, I, I don’t know. I think they actually have a pretty good library.
[00:59:30] I just wished that they, uh, their app was better.
[00:59:33] Brett: [00:59:33] well, now that I, I have it. And for the time being I’m paying for it, I’ll have to explore the library a little bit. It’s kind of
[00:59:39] Christina: [00:59:39] Yeah, you
[00:59:40] Brett: [00:59:40] stop paying for CBS now, the discovery’s done and, and just pay for peacock.
[00:59:46] Christina: [00:59:46] Yeah. Um, I, uh, I pay way too much money for my cell phone bill from Verizon. And they added some new plan where apparently now I get the entire Disney, [01:00:00] like plus like triple plays. So Disney, Hulu, ESPN, and the new discovery plus for free. So, uh, I mean, it’s not for free because clearly I’m paying, you know, like $200 a month for my cell phone.
[01:00:16] Um, when I don’t go anywhere. So. You know, the joke is ultimately on me, but, um, I am at least getting like, feeling slightly better. I’m like, Oh, okay. I can get some of these services, um, you know, paid for, but that’s the only one I haven’t tried yet. And the only reason I haven’t tried the, the discovery plus service, which just launched is because I didn’t want to outlay the cost for it when I was going to get it for free.
[01:00:40] And I had to switch my cell phone plan to get the free thing, even though it was the same price as what my old plan was, it had a different name. And it wouldn’t start until my next billing cycle. So let’s try that in like a week.
[01:00:52] Brett: [01:00:52] Do you want to talk about computer stuff?
[01:00:54] Christina: [01:00:54] Let’s talk about computer
[01:00:55] Brett: [01:00:55] Well, let’s start with a great computer app.
[01:00:59] Christina: [01:00:59] yes.
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[01:02:11] Christina: [01:02:11] And yeah, I’m just wanting to give a quick, uh, shout out PDF pen, if you have ever, like, especially if you’re, you know, on a Mac, but it’s great on iOS too. And you need to do some heavier editing or creation of PDF documents, but, um, like. Previous, just not going to cut it, but you don’t want to jump into the hellscape.
[01:02:29] That is Acrobat. It’s awesome. I, um, I don’t deal with PDFs as much as I used to. I primarily deal with word documents now, but I used to deal with word with the PDFs. A ton and PDF pen has been a lifesaver for me on multiple occasions, especially when going through, like, when I used to go through like hundreds of pages of court documents.
[01:02:48] And, um, needing to, uh, maybe like use OCR on certain stuff, like, uh, because of how I’ve been scanned in or whatever really good.
[01:02:58] Brett: [01:02:58] So there you go. PDF [01:03:00] pen at smiles, software.com/podcast. All right. So I wanna, I I’m, I’m not going to try to hit even half of the stuff that I threw in under our little computer section, but I do want to mention that I got carabiner working. Uh, I had to disable system integrity
[01:03:19] Christina: [01:03:19] Sip. Yeah, you, you, you had to turn off step. Yep.
[01:03:23] Brett: [01:03:23] um, that is not ideal.
[01:03:25] Like as a developer, I don’t like to have it turned off because I need to know
[01:03:30] Christina: [01:03:30] Right? You need to know how your
[01:03:32] Brett: [01:03:32] Right. Exactly. Exactly. So it’s annoying to me that I have to run it with it turned off, but the latest beta, uh, that came out last week, still didn’t fix the Caribbean and Caribbean has been completely rewritten to conform, um, with like the macro S requirements.
[01:03:51] So this is really frustrating. We filed, uh, a dozen, uh, feedback reports and I, I don’t know what’s going to happen there, [01:04:00] but. I have my hyper key for now. So I am a little less frustrated every time I use my Mac.
[01:04:07] Christina: [01:04:07] Yeah, I was going to say. And the frustrating thing is, is that with some apps, like I have some apps that you have to disable, um, uh, system integrity, production to use, but like, I can have like a command line flag, like turn it on or off when I need to use the app. But with an app, like, um, uh, Caribbean or like, it’s your super key.
[01:04:24] So you always have it running. So it’s not really an option for you to, you know, like selectively habit, you know, working or not.
[01:04:32] Brett: [01:04:32] Also, you know, I was, I was complaining that, uh, I couldn’t script, uh, do not disturb in big Sur. I found it like in,
[01:04:45] Christina: [01:04:45] Did he blog it?
[01:04:46] Brett: [01:04:46] um, no, I use it in a proprietary application. Um, Well, no, but I, I can link. There’s a way to do it from the command line that I’ll throw a link to the just, and, but basically [01:05:00] like, it used to be stored as a simple Boolean in, uh, in a system preferences.
[01:05:06] And you could just access it with the defaults command in big Sur it’s stored in a P list stored as a data object in appeal list. And you can’t easily directly access the Boolean value from the command line, but you can overwrite the entire P list key with, uh, like basically the, the blob that the data would create.
[01:05:34] Uh, if you ran it through like PLU tail anyway, to, to, to make that intelligible. You can, with a default command turn a do not disturb on and off in big Sur. And we found it. So if you’re wondering how to use your in your command line application, how to do that, just check the show notes.
[01:05:58] Christina: [01:05:58] Yeah. Um, [01:06:00] and I realize you use it. Yeah. And proprietary, um, uh, you know, like application, however, uh, I do think that you should like write something up about it just in case other people could use it.
[01:06:11] Brett: [01:06:11] Yeah, I’ll, I’ll link it. I mentioned like I’ve been putting a lot of work into bunch, one of my apps and, uh, it has, it has the ability to turn, do not disturb on and off, but it had been broken.
[01:06:23] Christina: [01:06:23] Yeah, actually, that’s what I was thinking. I was like, was this a bunch thing? Because I could see this being used with, with bunch. And I noticed that bunch, I’m looking at your blog right now. Like you have like interactive bunches and like some other updates, like, like, uh, we know you weren’t Manock last week, you were, um, manually week before last, but where
[01:06:40] Brett: [01:06:40] I had, like,
[01:06:41] Christina: [01:06:41] energy for
[01:06:42] Brett: [01:06:42] I had one day of mania, but in short, my, my new meds are working really well.
[01:06:47] Christina: [01:06:47] I was going to ask, we didn’t even do a, uh, a mental health corner update. We were doing it at the very end of the show instead of at the beginning. But, um, what were you on? You’re on the Focalin, right? Yeah. So the Falklands doing good
[01:06:58] Brett: [01:06:58] I’ve, I’ve, I’ve even [01:07:00] doubt on it. I’m not getting crazy. Uh, ramp up, uh, heart flutters and stuff like that. Um, and I’m just, I’m able to work all day and it’s yeah, I’m getting a lot of time.
[01:07:16] Christina: [01:07:16] Amazing. Um, uh, I’ll I’m going to talk more about this in depth in the weeks to come cause we’re out of time, but I, um, wish what was going to say. I, uh, I’m building a gaming PC. I finally decided to do it.
[01:07:31] Brett: [01:07:31] Are you going to have a cool RGB keyboard on it?
[01:07:34] Christina: [01:07:34] Oh yeah. Oh yeah. And the case, I spent so much money on fans. Um, I still have the CPU. That’s gonna be the hardest thing to get. So what happened was, um, it’s been impossible to get parts. I don’t know if you’ve been following any of this or not, but like everybody is building computers, everybody. And so the DIY.
[01:07:56] Exactly. Although I think that’s finally even now, but like, [01:08:00] you know, power supplies, motherboards, the new processor chips, and then what makes it worse is that they came out with new GPU’s both Nvidia and AMD and then AMD also released new, um, CPU’s so. The demand is just crazy. And the graphics is especially, it’s been like impossible to get a graphics card.
[01:08:20] Like if you want a 3000 series Nvidia card, like the scalpers are having a field day and I refuse to pay scalper prices. I just won’t do it. Although I did buy a stupid bundle from new egg, with $130 power supply that I don’t want. So I’m going to try to sell that for a hundred bucks. So I did get scalped, but it’s worth it, but I wa.
[01:08:41] What happening is that I was, I was going to put it off. I was like, I’m not going to bother. And then last week, um, I was able to get in and I was able to order a 30, 80 card, um, from new egg. And it wasn’t just any card. It was like the exact card I wanted. Uh, cause I want to make my build beat like as white as possible [01:09:00] and be really pretty.
[01:09:01] So, so that’s what I’m doing. Um, it, it it’ll be probably at least another month before I have everything together, but. Um, I’m in the process of, of doing that right now, which I’m excited about, to be honest, I haven’t built a PC in so long, so
[01:09:17] Brett: [01:09:17] I haven’t built a PC in almost 30 years. No.
[01:09:23] Christina: [01:09:23] so much easier now than it used to. It’s so much easier now than it used to be. Like, even since the last time I did it, like there used to be a bunch of shit you’d have to do to your motherboard. And like now it’s literally just plug and play and, uh, Which makes it better and more accessible for people.
[01:09:40] Um, and, uh, I’m sure some people probably lament the fact that it literally is like plug and play, but for me I’m like, Oh, good. I don’t have to deal with, you know, um, like, uh, pins, shorting pins on my motherboard to get things to work the way that I need it to. So.
[01:09:58] Brett: [01:09:58] Well, good luck with that.
[01:10:01] [01:10:00] Christina: [01:10:01] You thank you. Uh, fingers crossed that I’ll find a 5,900 ex that’s. That’s what my next big thing I’m looking for is, but, uh, I, I understand that, uh, um, it might have to settle for something like less substantial and then buy it later. We’ll see. But anyway,
[01:10:16] Brett: [01:10:16] I had any way to help you, I would.
[01:10:19] Christina: [01:10:19] I know you would, which is sweet of you. Um, but, uh, congrats on all of your, um, App updates.
[01:10:28] Um,
[01:10:29] Brett: [01:10:29] I want to next next week, maybe I want to just, uh, unload about bunch. It has gotten so many new features recently that I feel like I feel like a, I should make it a commercial application, but, uh, we can talk about why I’m not. Uh, but, but B I feel like everyone should be, uh, everyone who knows how to edit a text file and wants to automate anything really should be using it.
[01:10:57] Christina: [01:10:57] No. I agree with you. And it’s interesting. Cause I was actually thinking [01:11:00] a bunch because I’ve been doing more stuff with my stream deck, like test to script that, to, to do stuff with like, uh, teams calls and stuff. And I was like, yeah, it, it bunch is in many ways kind of like the software, like version of a stream deck.
[01:11:13] Brett: [01:11:13] Well, and I, I have a whole panel on my stream deck that just calls different bunch. Oh shit.
[01:11:25] You want to know something really funny? I thought I was pressing the button on my stream deck that would load up my page full of bunches, but I forgot I was in, I was in the, the podcast profile. So the bunch key actually re ran the podcast bunch, but it was already running. it quit all of my podcasting apps.
[01:11:47] Christina: [01:11:47] Hilarious. No, I figured it was something like that because I was at first, I thought it was my thing. I was like, did I just hit the end call button? I don’t think so. Okay. All right. Well it’s perfect timing cause we’re almost out of we’re out of time anyway, so
[01:11:59] Brett: [01:11:59] No, I’m not I’m [01:12:00] I’m gonna I’ll, I’ll cut some space out of that, but I’m totally leaving that in
[01:12:04] Christina: [01:12:04] you
[01:12:05] Brett: [01:12:05] perils of stream decks and, and bunches.
[01:12:08] Christina: [01:12:08] No, that’s hilarious. We’re talking about it. You hit the button and ruined it, but no, I want to talk more about bunch next week, and I’m also a thank you for reminding me. I said that I would create a, a GitHub and awesome stream deck, um, repo on GitHub. And I’m going to, uh, like right now so that, um, and I’ll put a link to some of your stuff there, but I want to obviously PRS welcome.
[01:12:28] I want to like, have that be a repository, hopefully of cool stuff people are doing with stream deck.
[01:12:34] Brett: [01:12:34] All right. Well, great talking to you, Christina.
[01:12:38] Christina: [01:12:38] Great. Talking with you, Brett happy last day of, uh, hell and, uh, knock on wood that, that things will, uh, things are going to be safe tomorrow and hope everybody out there. Listening is having a good time too. I will be celebrating by just like listening to Taylor Swift, I think on a loop. See, bringing Taylor into it
[01:12:59] Brett: [01:12:59] Twice now.
[01:13:00] [01:13:00] Christina: [01:13:00] twice now.
[01:13:01] Exactly.
[01:13:01] Brett: [01:13:01] All right. Well, I’ll see you in a, in a new administration.
[01:13:05] Christina: [01:13:05] See you in a new administration, get some sleep, Brett.
[01:13:07] Brett: [01:13:07] Get some sleep.

Jan 13, 2021 • 1h 4min
222: Speaking of Dystopias
We had to talk about Georgia. We had to talk about insurrection. We had to talk about American Fascism. But we also managed to cover an array of what today’s kids would call classic television. We hope you find this episode as cathartic as we did.
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Show Links
The Office Ladies Podcast
The Office
Parks and Rec
King of the Hill – That’s What She Said
Vulture – None of the Best Comedies on TV Would Exist Without ‘King of the Hill’
Network
NPR – Recalling Nazis From His Childhood, Arnold Schwarzenegger Decries The Capitol Assault
Buzzfeed – Amazon Will Suspend Hosting For Pro-Trump Social Network Parler
The Magicians
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Check out more episodes at overtiredpod.com and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or your favorite podcast app. Find Brett as @ttscoff and Christina as @film_girl, and follow Overtired at @ovrtrd on Twitter.
Transcript


