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On this episode of DTNS Apple acquires pixel miter, maybe, regional broadband continues to go to the sky. And we'll pour out a little liquor for Windows 10, but you still have options. This is the Daily Tech News for Friday, November 1st, 2024. From Studio Animal House, I'm Sarah Lane. Yeah, to the 314, I'm Patrick Jordan. From the GTA, I'm Jen Cutter. I'm drawing the top tech stories in Cleveland. I'm Len Peralta. We're covering from a sugar high in the show's producer, Roger Chang.
Jen Cutter, so nice to have you back. It's been a minute. What are you doing? I'm great to be back. I am playing so much hockey right now. I just played four games in five days and I'm feeling it. Usually that's more playoffs and tournaments, so starting the season like that. Little rough, little rough. Well, what isn't going to be rough? Well, depending on how you feel about your news is the quick hits, which we will start with right now.
Amazon's upgraded AI powered Alexa initially set to launch this year with improved conversational abilities in chat GPT-like intelligence is now delayed until 2025. Bloomberg sources say teams were informed of the extended timeline and feedback from beta testers of the Let's Chat feature indicated Luke Worm responses. Earlier the summer fortune reported that the new Alexa might never even be ready. It's going to be ready, but apparently not until next year.
Indonesia has halted the sale of Google Pixel smartphones due to its local content requirements at going a similar move earlier this week against Apple's iPhone 16. To sell in Indonesia, smartphones must meet a 40% local value threshold through manufacturing software development or investments in local tech innovation.
This rule is managed by Indonesia's Ministry of Industry and is meant to strengthen the domestic economy by capitalizing on its large consumer market and is enforced through a local content level certification system. Google is shifting its typical Android release schedule moving Android 16's launch to spring of 2025 rather than its usual fall timeline.
Confirming the news, Google said that the earlier release is supposed to align better with device launches where more devices can adopt the latest Android version sooner. The company also plans for a major Q2 release each year with a smaller Q4 SDK update that adds features without significantly all-terrain core systems. Comcast is considering spinning off its cable networks into a separate company amid continued decline in subscribers according to company president Mike Kavanaugh.
This potential new entity would focus on Comcast cable channels like MSNBC, CNBC, E and Bravo, but would exclude streaming streaming services like Peacock and broadcast networks. In Q3 alone, Comcast lost 36500,000 cable TVs, subscribers driving this re-evaluation of its cable assets. Google's Gemini AI Assistant is gaining smart home controls with a new Google Home extension that lets users manage smart devices through simple chats.
Currently available to Android users in the Google Home Public Preview program, the feature enables controls for certain security devices like cameras, locks, gates, and doors. But the extension isn't fully compatible with all smart devices yet and can't initiate preset routines. AI is coming to your industry, if it isn't already here. But AI needs lots of speed and computing power. So how do you compete without cost spiraling?
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Well, with the name your price tool from Progressive, you can find options that fit your budget and potentially lower your bills. Try it at Progressive.com. Progressive casualty insurance company and affiliates. Price and coverage match limited by state law, not available in all states. Let's talk a little bit about Apple's earnings. Apple's really been on one this week. Given us all sorts of stuff, as it promised last week that it would do.
The company reported its fiscal 2024-4th quarter results, achieving a record revenue of $94.9 billion. That's up 6% over the previous year. iPhone sales, up 6% your over year to $46.22 billion. Max sales also up 2% your over year to $7.74 billion. iPad sales also up 8% your over year to $6.95 billion. However, wearables, home, and accessories, which is one they put them all together.
Wear down 3% your over year to $9.4 billion. Still a lot of money, but hey, it was down. Also kind of a regional thing. Apple's revenue was down 0.3% your over year to $15 billion in China.
But it was up 7.6% to $5.93 billion in Japan. Also up 16.6% to $7.38 billion in the rest of Asia Pacific. Up 11% to $29.92 billion in Europe. Apple's services division, which includes the App Store, Apple TV Plus, and all the shows that you might watch on that, Apple Music. Also up 12% your over year to $24.97 billion.
That's a new quarterly record. Still under analyst estimates. Looking at this, Apple had a pretty great quarter. We were starting to have a lot of conversations about what's Apple doing. Apple was the Apple Vision Pro. How is the company going to come back from this? I don't know. It seems like Apple's doing OK. Apple makes more money. How long has it been since they've actually lost money in any meaningful way? It's been a long time. Yeah. Yeah.
I'm sorry to hear that my one-watch purchase was not enough to help them beat that estimate. Jen, how could you possibly just buy the one watch? Not in this quarter, but eventually I am looking at the iPhone 16, mostly because I kind of want that gorgeous camera. Yeah. That's also been part of the conversation. For example, I have an iPhone 15 Pro Max. It's great. I got it not even a year ago. I'm like, there's just no way I need a new phone. I bought a Mac. My nice skinny 11, it's great.
There you go. There you go. I bought a Mac Mini earlier this week because Apple announced them. I've been waiting for that for quite some time. It is interesting to me that China is a big, big, big market for Apple. It's getting a little problematic for Apple. For a variety of reasons. Yes, Apple can make a lot of money, but that is a huge market. If China continues to pull back from Apple, let's look at the next quarter and see where we are.
I also think that Apple took some swings. The Apple Vision Pro, for example, I've got one behind me. I'm a little bit out of reach. The company has been like, all right, early adopters, stuff. We did what we did. I think a lot of people would also say that that's not a win. Not a win for the company. We're looking good here. But at the same time, I think the services division is where I think it's the most interesting. That's where Apple can just acquire companies.
I would also point out that one analyst are insane, except when they're not. It's weird to want somebody like, that wasn't what we expected you to hit. I'm also seeing analysts get upset because their expectations were beaten. Apple TV retried design in the last few months where they made the video and the movie app disappear.
It was all sublimated into the Apple TV app. It makes it almost impossible to find anything. I'm not surprised that maybe they didn't grow as much as they expected you were one and two. But they're also doing a lot of weird experiments to consolidate their control over the user experience on Apple TV. I'm curious. I am to I'm also curious about Apple announcing that it's acquiring the app pixel made that's the company. Well, that's the company behind a variety of apps.
Image editing apps like pixel made a pro photo made her is another one. The pixel made her team says no immediate changes to their apps. Basically meaning we will be a standalone product. For now. For everybody who remembers dark sky. The acquisition still pending regulatory approval. So it's not a done deal yet. But let's just say it is.
I still have PTSD about the dark sky situation that used to be my absolute favorite weather app. And once Apple acquired it and I don't know made it something way. I don't know less cool. I can live with the interface changes. But I think Sarah and I have discussed probably several times on this podcast where we would get a notification.
It's going to be rain in five minutes and we would look up. We'd like it's a blue sky. Dark skies finally lost its wham and the rain would come down. If you like, okay, dark sky. Okay, I see what you're doing there. They were that good. Well, they basically came up with an algorithm that is my understanding if they took like all of these weather predictions. They monitored them all.
They looked at what actually happened and then based on because some, you know, weather algorithms were better in some parts of the country than others, it would basically average them out till it got the most accurate complication and kind of complication. I'm talking about watches. The most accurate sort of, you know, they would just they would just sort of smush them all down.
And it would ever worked best in your particular location. And yes, it was amazing, at least in northern California, whether simple in northern California, but it was pretty accurate elsewhere. And now it's, you know, now I'm laughing because it's it'll tell me there's no rain coming and I'll wake up and it'll be just absolutely slamming down rain. And I don't know if that's a big western thing or climate change thing.
And it's my beloved weather app thing. Yeah, the dark sky for anybody who's not familiar. I mean, dark sky was just a really cool third party weather app had so much data. It was really accurate. I mean, it was just it was the weather app. Much of what a huge bill full weather app. Yeah. And when Apple acquired it, I was like, all right, you know, then the apples native weather apple just get better, but it got worse somehow. Well, fingers crossed for the new guys here.
Fingers crossed in. Or just start pouring one out for pixel made a pro. Sorry, that was rude. It'll be fine. They won't change anything. It'll be glorious. All right. So on Thursday, the European Commission announced the plans to sign a contract with space rise to develop Irish squared, a 290 satellite broadband network. The estimated cost is around 10 billion euros, about 10.9 billion USD.
Irish squared program, aka infrastructure for resilience, intercanon activity and security by satellite is part of an EU plan to build out a sovereign satellite broadband network independent of foreign or commercially owned systems like starlink and one web. Europe isn't alone here. Canada's federal government is providing 2.14 billion and loans to auto based tell us that. To build its light speed broadband satellite network.
The Quebec, parental government is providing 400 million and loans to MDS to build its satellites in the province, because you know, I got to get the Canadian angle in there somewhere. This is interesting. You know, we, you hear a lot about starlink for sure, you know, start, you know, the satellite internet, starlink, you know, even, you know, the planes are contemplating adding starlink to, you know, their systems one web specifically as well.
But the municipality aspect of this is is kind of cool. I mean, the idea is to basically have an alternative to starlink and one web in case there's our situations where either it is a direct need you have a natural disaster, you don't rely on a commercial provider to provide broadband services, whether it's to first responders, some sort of a delivery or just, you know, general internet access to people who need it.
And so currently, you know, starlink, I'm for more, you know, whether you, you like or dislike the company is like the only real player globally. So you see it having deals with airlines, you see it having deals with companies and other countries. It is, it is the least expensive. It is the fastest global option. It is not the only global option.
It is probably the most robust global option. It is, well, it's, it's the most, yeah, it has offers the most coverage in terms of where, you know, whether a company or a country might be located. And I think this is one of those things where the EU feels that having some having a similar service under their control is more beneficial to them. Not only from just sort of an internet sovereignty kind of like strategic outlook, but hey, we can offer this to our air carriers.
We can offer this to our hotels. We can offer it to our cruise lines. In other words, having some sort of service that they can monetize for the benefit of the EU and not just to, to SpaceX. Jen, what's the situation where you are up in Canada? I mean, does this seem attractive to you? There, there's a very old but accurate line that Canada is three telecom companies in a trench coat.
So I, I do have concerns about where this might be going because Bell is kind of having this ongoing argument with government about how they should be able to block anything at any time with no oversight. And you won't even know why again, because this all comes back to hockey because they want to stop pirate hockey broadcast because they own one of the networks that broadcast hockey and also part of the team. Yes, the other national sport of Canada.
But like the reason Quebec is getting involved is that Quebec likes jobs and tech jobs, which is why they get to count separate from the federal government because they need to be in the news. It is good that Canada is investing in tech and hardware in tech because that is not something we are really known for. If you ask somebody to name a Canadian tech company, they're going to go Spotify. I'm not Shopify, excuse me, because that's just what we're known for.
Like Prime Minister Trudeau called this Canada's largest upcoming space program. And I'm thinking like, wow, this is going to like a lot of the Canada arm in terms of how much money we're spending on a physical thing. We'll see if it also comes true fruition at all because they're planning on some stuff by 2026, which will be right here earlier than the EU thing. So the world will have an example of how it can go or how it won't.
There is definitely a sort of mindset of building up your in the same way that we see the what happens to supply chains during the pandemic. And they're kind of like, let's bring these some of these supply chains or the most crucial ones closer to our shores. I think for a lot of countries, just having these key keystone technologies available and under your under their control is part of a is part of a sentiment that isn't that that that's pretty global right. So it's not.
Yeah, I mean, we need to have chip fabrications in the US. There's historical precedents right, you know, there was a glow NAS, which is still out the Soviet version of GPS, which was an alternative because they knew they couldn't use GPS should be cold war go hot. So they started working on their own alternative. And I think certainly everything going on between the Ukraine and Russia has does nothing, but make, you know, a lot of large countries want their own control over their own system.
Especially with all the vagaries of the page, they turn start like off is turned on as Russia using it legally. How are they doing that? What's going on inside? Well, I bought something that said mobile in Germany and brought it over to the you know, I mean, like it's it's a little people want control. And they want to make sure the enemies don't have access to their systems in terms of distribution and stuff. It's going to be wild to watch this over the next couple of years.
And it's going to be multiple competing satellite internet. I don't know. I also feel really, really bad for astronomers. Yeah. There was a Skelly, 2909 said astronomers would be so pleased to have multiple mega satellite kind of constellations literally blocking the view of the the night sky. Space junk. Yeah, it's a whole thing. And if you have thoughts on this or anything else that we talk about on the show future show past shows, do join our conversation in our discord. It's a fun crew.
You can join by linking to a Patreon account at patreon.com slash DTNS. Explaining football to the friend who's just there for the nachos hard tailgating from home like a pro with snacks and drinks everyone will love any easy win. And with Instacart helping deliver the snack time MVP's to your door, you're ready for the game in as fast as 30 minutes.
So you never miss a play or lose your seat on the couch or have to go head to head for the last chicken wing shop game day faves on Instacart and enjoy zero dollar delivery fees on your first three grocery orders offer valid for limited time other fees in terms of life. This episode is brought to you by progressive insurance. Do you ever find yourself playing the budgeting game?
Well, with the name your price tool from progressive you can find options that fit your budget and potentially lower your bills. Try it at progressive.com progressive casualty insurance company and affiliates price and coverage match limited by state law not available in all states. On October 14th, 2025 support for windows 10 ends no updates, no patches, no nothing.
Unless you cough up $30 for the extended security updates or ESU, consumers users who do that will continue to receive windows 10 security updates for one year. Corporate customers will be charged $61 for that one year, $122 for a second year and $244 for a third year of updates. Consumers interested in this program can sign up closer to the end of official support so Patrick, we're not there yet.
But what do you make of these options to extend windows 10's life? I mean, circling the drain a bit here. Yeah, I mean, I'm also kind of fascinated that companies can get three years, but consumers can only get one that's still kind of.
I just irks me for no particularly valid reason. So, you know, you check for windows 11 compatibility or a notification pops up windows 10, you know, this PC cat run windows 11 and sorry, this PC does not currently meet the minimum system requirements to run windows 11 either way it's annoying.
You know, yeah, look, you can pay Microsoft the big, which is 3x what I paid for my last windows 10 bundle like the license. I think literally that's three times what I paid for my last three windows 10 licenses.
You know, if you have it download PC health check app and it's really funny because some of the things I hadn't run into you need at least a 64 gigabyte hard drive and it will tell you that your hard drive is too small to laugh because like who's running windows 10 and 64 gigabytes of storage. If you have a pre 2017 Intel or an AMD Zen 2 processor, basically, AMD's into processor after 2019 or 2017 in later Intel processors, that's the bare minimum you're going to need to run windows 11.
If you only have four gigabytes of memory, you can't run windows 11. I want to know how you're running windows now in 4 gigabytes of memory that seems to be friendly painful. You know, if you display a smaller than 720p you have no dx 12 support, you know, it's probably time to upgrade. The real problem most of us are going to run into though is not having secure boot or TPM 2.0.
Secure boots all about controlling the active operating system to fight ransomware or malware or just making a pain in the ass to run a second operating system like Linux. You know, you need to check actually though your bio is your ufifirmware and make sure because there in many cases people actually have secure boot and TPM 2.0 they just don't have turned on.
In theory, like there's a TPM chip on the motherboard or a module that plugs into header pins on the motherboard or it could be virtual, it could be firmware. It's been a requirement for Windows since 2016, you know, Windows 10 required TPM 1.2 11.1's TPM 2.0. And before you ask because I always forget it is trusted platform module helps with encryption. It's supposed to fight firmware attacks. It isn't using countries where wept in Western encryption is banned.
Hi China. And it does a lot of things that irritate the snout out of security privacy people that I will not go down the rabbit hole right now. So you've run your PC health check. It tells you don't have TPM or secure boot. You've upgraded your bio so you've checked you know there's nothing to turn on. You know you can buy a motherboard with TPM 2.0 or in some crazy cases if your motherboard has the space you could track down the right TPM module and plug it into that motherboard.
You know I would check the price of the TPM module versus the motherboard. I would make sure I had the right TPM 2.0 module because it would be really sad to pay more than a new motherboard costs to buy a TPM module module for your old motherboard. Honestly like the system I'm running on right now has a new processor in motherboard coming.
There's a machine all over you know to my right that's an all in one that's going Linux because it's time for me to bring open source operating systems back into my life again in a meaningful way. You know the guts from this system are going to be a server or they're going to go to my cousin for something he wants to play around with.
You know if you've got a fave I'd love if you tweeted Patrick Norton or emailed me but seriously I think Linux for a lot of people is a great option at least for he enthusiastic people or people who are sort of curious about open source I think Linux is a great alternative. Otherwise though you're probably upgrading your hardware whether you want to or not in October of 2026.
Now Jen I know you're a Windows person as well I mean do you have systems that are affected by this all of them I do not have a single machine in the house that has a TPM and I looked into the switching their old machines are there still beefy enough my render time in resolve is actually great so I haven't felt the need to switch I do most of my gaming on consoles these days that's pretty good.
But you mentioned Linux I had a couple friends switch to Linux because they are absolutely sick of the AI stuff in windows and thanks to the steam deck of all things there's a lot of good gaming you can get done in Linux these days so I'm going to let them report back as it as their daily driver.
But I'll probably still stick with windows 10 as long as the programs I need for work still work and so far that's it like I have been looking around to see like do it do have a corporate windows 10 somewhere because like I would not mind the three years of upgrades but they've absolutely got my money for the for the one year of of security updates I am going to pay it 100% understand it's just a not have to deal with it for another year 30 bucks is probably a quite reasonable price.
And if like tech hardware prices come down to then I'd be like okay I'll jump on it right now but right now I'm not ashamed spending money on new hardware. Yeah I mean that's the thing right is you know using like some of some of these systems are a little long in the tooth but they work for me.
You know the whole sort of like you have to get the latest and greatest at all times some wouldn't that be nice if we all did that but you know pocket books you know they're all sorts of reasons why you be like I don't need it I can't afford it you know or you know something in between.
I was laughing you know the group at work with you we inherited an Apple Mac pro you know one of the towers which aesthetically I still think it's beautiful but for people who run video I still think it's the dumbest enclosure design ever because you know with this beautiful tower like 17 boxes plugged into it so you have enough storage and stuff but I was laughing because somebody's like oh we have this tower I'm like great I don't think there's any operating system updates for that.
And you know it it's like it's it happens in other platforms I think it's just because there's so many windows users out there there's going to be a much louder noise about this one yeah we'll see yeah next October will be be interesting to see all of the crying because like not everybody's paying attention this stuff it's going to really surprise them when they start getting pop ups it's also it's also funny right because it's like okay next year I don't don't affect me right now.
I'm like well it's going to though it's going to create up on you. You thought co-pilot notifications were annoying wait until you're operating because you're screaming in your face that you're insecure and you're going to die screaming yeah before to listen to us. We would like to not die screaming on the show and to help us not do that is Lynn Peralta who has been drawing a textory throughout the show.
When what do you have for us you know I'm a Mac person so I just have to say for windows 10 just let it die and that's what this is. You know just let it go let it go folks. I know that's not that much to spend but you know come on just just let it go if you're a windows person and you want to say I don't know not celebrate but it is it is all saints day today so maybe this will be a perfect gift.
For somebody who is a is a windows user in your life you can of course go to my patreon patreon.com forward slash Lynn get this for you at the D T and S lover level or if you want to go to my just the old fashioned way go to my online store. Purchase it there along with maybe a custom drawn holiday card because you know folks it is November 1st and it is time to be thinking about the holidays so give that some thought and yes just let it go. Let it go let it go everybody let it go.
For a little liquor that's sort of the game. Thank you Lynn as always Patrick Norton also thank to you let folks know where they can keep up with your latest. Oh I think I'm at Patrick Norton on all of the social. Replacements for Twitter I'm still hanging out on Twitter watching things burn because apparently that's punk rock and of course keep an eye on a V Excel in November.
I the Excel dot com. Excellent just a reminder Tom's top five is the show where Tom breaks down the top five things that you need to know about technology and this week he's on vacation but he's still at it he's counted down the top five ways to distract yourself during the US elections. You can catch it at daily tech news show dot com daily tech news show on TikTok rather D T and S picks P I X on Instagram and YouTube at YouTube dot com slash daily tech news show.
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