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Nothing Phone is actually something

Jul 15, 20231 hr 50 min
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Episode description

028 Rich on Tech Radio Show - July 15, 2023Rich is testing the new iOS 17 Public Beta software. He only recommends installing it if you are tech savvy or have a secondary device. Otherwise, the official software launches in the Fall.A feature called Personal Voice in iOS 17 lets you recreate your own voice using AI.If you’re going to the movies, be sure to enable Theater Mode on your watch. Don’t forget to turn it off when you leave the theater.Rich switched to Notion for his note-taking.Rich really likes the Nothing Phone (2).Rod in Los Angeles says his computer mouse is constantly double clicking.Hollywood actors are on strike and AI is part of the problem.Guest Sissie Hsiao explains what’s new with Google Bard.Marcy in Rancho Cucamonga asks about a data breach. Google has a free and paid dark web monitoring service. You can learn more about it here.Ted in Fountain Valley asks if he can transfer his software over to his new laptop.Amazon Prime Day sets a new record for sales.Kathy in Duarte doesn’t like the Yahoo email redesign.AmazeVR’s Lance Drake and Kyungkuk Kim to talk about their new VR concert app.Kerry in Santa Ynez wants to know why her friend’s TV volume goes up and down.Leslie in Laguna Beach is having trouble with Mint. Is there an alternative?The Roku Channel is now on Google TVBarry wants to know why his NTFS drive isn’t working on his mac. Check out NTFS for Mac from Paragon Software.Google Calendar now lets you easily find a mutual meeting time and accept paid appointments.Ben Sin reviews the

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Transcript

Speaker 1

Nothing to say here but a new phone brand. Hollywood goes on strike over AI, among other things, Should you install iOS seventeen Beta plus? Your tech questions answered?

Speaker 2

What's going on?

Speaker 1

I'm Rich de Murou and this is Rich on Tech.

Speaker 3

The show where I talk about the tech stuff I think you should know about and answer your questions about technology.

Speaker 1

I believe that tech should be easy, helpful, inspiring and fun. Phone lines are now open. Yes, that's right. Phone lines are now open at triple A Rich one oh one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two, four to one zero one. And no, AI did not take over the show just yet. What you just heard is my personal voice. This is a new feature on iOS seventeen that lets you recreate your own voice using AI. Now it sounds silly, there's a reason for it, but here's

what you have to do. It took me about twenty four hours to create that. I had to sit in a room and read one hundred and fifty different phrases. And once I read those one hundred and fifty different phrases, it could then synthesize my voice and it took overnight. It took me about a half an hour to read the phrases, but it took the phone about twenty four hours to actually analyze and recreate my voice. Now, why

would you do this? Why would you want your own voice, which, by the way, I don't really think sounds like me in a big way. I think it has intonations of me, but it's not really rich on tech. But here's the deal. This is a feature that is actually an accessibility feature. So it was created with people in mind that may have some sort of degenerative disease or illness that would

cause them to lose their voice over time. And so in this way, instead of using a robot voice to beak to do text to speech later on in life, they can actually use their own voice. And so while I was recording this, I was actually getting kind of sad because it made me realize that when we're gone, our voice is gone too, and we're gone. I mean, it's just a it's kind of weird. So I don't want to bring you down. But that's just one of

the new features in iOS seventeen. The beta was released this week, and so a lot of folks are wondering if they should install it. My advice is only if you are super tech savvy or if you have a secondary device, because there could be problems. This is a beta software and so that means it's not fully finished. People are saying it's good. I'm not running it on my primary device, so I can't tell you if it's perfect, but it could be some issues there by the way,

maybe this got lost in this whole thing. But phone lines are open at triple A rich one oh one eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one. Give me a call. If you have a question about technology, you can also email me. Just go to or email hello at rich on tech dot tv. Also new this week is the website rich on tech dot tv is completely redesigned, reformed. It's all brand new. I finally got the security lock that y'all have been asking me for

because you said, rich your website's insecure. I said, yeah, but I don't really collect data, so it's not that big of a deal. But now the lock is there. Rest assured the site is secure. So if you want to look up show notes, if you want to see what I do on TV, it is all there rich on tech dot TV. If you look at the top of the page, there is a banner for the show notes. So if you hear something I mentioned on the show, it will appear on those show notes in near real time.

So that's just one of the ways I'm working for you to make life a little bit better. Ah this week, let's see what happened. So we went to the movies. I'm not gonna tell you all about that, but one little pro tip. Okay, my wife had her Apple Watch on and we're at the movies and in the middle of a silent portion of the movie, all of a sudden, we hear a walkie talkie. It's like, hey, mom, are you gonna pick me up? Because there's that walkie talkie feature on the Apple Watch and we didn't think to

turn that off. And so my wife is like fumbling with her watch, and my kid is like, hey mom, what are you there? What's happening? And everyone in the audience, which, by the way, it's a matine, there was not that many people, but we were laughing because she couldn't run out of the movie theater quick enough. So let me just give you the pro tip of the week. Before

you go to the movies. On your Apple Watch, you swipe up and there are two little masks it's an icon in the quick settings that is your theater mode. Tap that on your watch, turn on theater mode before you get into the movies. That will disable the walkie talkie and it will also disable the sounds and the screen.

So once you're done doing that, just hold your hands, you take your palm, and you just tap your Apple Watch screen with your entire palm and it will turn off your screen and it will not turn back on until you press a button. And then when you're done with the movie, you go back in. You swipe up from the bottom of your Apple Watch screen and you

tap those two little faces and you'll turn that off. Now, I did that before I got into the movie theater, but what I forgot to do was turn it off, and so I didn't get messages for the next twenty four hours. On my Apple Watch. People were texting me left and right, and I didn't see any of them because I still had this theater mode. They were trying to get a hold of me in the newsroom and they couldn't text me, and I just I looked at my watch. I said, I don't know, I didn't see. Oh,

there it is. Oh. I left that on last night there you go. So just remember to turn that off if you do turn it back on. Ah what else this week? Oh, I switched to a new note taking system. I am really and I've talked about this on the show. I'm really trying to do better about my notes. So I've been trying all these different note taking situations and ever Note if you've been following that, that was my previous note taking preferred application. And they laid off a

whole bunch of people in San Francisco. They moved operations to Italy. They actually got purchased by a company that I really like. They make another app that I love called Splice. It's a video editing app. But now everyone's worried about the future of ever Note. So everyone's kind of like fleeing from it, myself included, because it's expensive and you know, it kind of like has not grown over the years. It's done a lot of stuff, but

it's kind of clunky. And Notion is this new kind of it's like the bell of the what do they call it, the bell of the ball. You know, it's like the one that everyone wants right now. And so Notion is what I switched to. But it is like it does way too much. So now I'm like somehow like the executive CEO of note taking that I just don't need. Like all I needed was like a notepad, and I got like a Ferrari on. You know, it's just so much. So but now I'm in it because

I spent the whole day switching to it. So now I can't go back because my wife will make fun of me. So now I got to stick with it because it is I'm in it to win it now. So I did switch to Notion. And of course with all these apps, the minute you get sort of into them, you know, I switched everything over, and all of a sudden, I run into a roadblock and it's like, oh, by the way, that's like, you know, it's a couple bucks a month for that feature. I'm like, oh, it's called freemium.

So that's that's how all these apps work. Let's see what else? So many things this week? Oh, Nothing Phone, this is what I've been using. This is a new phone that the name is Nothing and it's the Nothing Phone too. That's actually the second version. It launches in a couple of days. I've been using it for the past couple of weeks, and I got to tell you, it's been a long time since I've actually fallen in love with the device. But I fell in love with

this device. Why because it is the most it's the most iPhone Android I've used. Now, before you say, okay, Rich, sure you like it because it's an iPhone, no no, no, I mean like it's simple, the design is timeless and beautiful, and it's unique. Like it just works really well. The camera is good, the form factor is good. It's not too big, it's not too small. If this was a bowl of porridge, it would be perfect. This is the one that Goldilocks would would eat. I don't know if

do you want to eat a phone? Probably not. But the interesting thing about this phone is the back of the device. So on the back of this device, there's a whole bunch it's actually translucent, and there's a whole bunch of LED lights and I'm gonna light them up right now, just so Bobo can see this. See that. So it's these elied You can't see this, but Bobo can.

And it's these LED lights on the back. They call it the glyph interface, And what that does is they want you to put your phone down, use it less. They want you to put it face down so you don't see your notifications. And when you put this phone face down, what happens. It goes into this mode of do not disturb, and only your most important notifications will actually light up the back of the phone. So I had one set for my wife, a couple friends, work people, and so if they text me or call me, it

will light up on the back of that phone. Otherwise, all those other nonsense notifications that are trying to get you into Instagram and Facebook and threads and all that other stuff, they won't light up your phone because this phone wants you to use it less. We're going to talk more about this phone a little bit later. I've fallen in love with it, but I've got someone else to talk to, Ben Sin of XDA Developers. He is

going to give me his review of the phone. So maybe there's something I'm missing, but I think this phone is near perfect. But we'll talk about that a little bit later on in the show. We've got a lot of great stuff coming up on the show today, Lots and lots of calls from you at Triple eight rich one oh one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two, four to one zero one, We've got Cissy Shao of

Google Bard. Sissy's gonna talk about some of the new features that you can take advantage of on Google Bard. Then this concert that I went to in virtual reality is just incredible, and so we're gonna have a Maze VR come on the show and talk about their new VR concert app. I'm not kidding. I was standing within inches of Zara Larsen for a personal concert. Yes, it was all virtual reality in a headset, but it was quite incredible. And then, like I said, Benson will be

along to review the Nothing Phone two. But first it is your turn. Your calls coming up next. Give me a call Triple eight Rich one on one email hello at richontech dot TV. Give me a call if you have a question about technology. My name is rich Demiro and you are listening to rich on Tech. Welcome back to rich on Tech. Rich Demiro here hanging out with you talking at technology at Triple eight Rich one O one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two four one

zero one. Let's go to Rod in Los Angeles. Rod, you're kicking off the show. Welcome, Hey, how you doing. I'm doing fantastic. How about you staying cool?

Speaker 4

I live out in the Zanfernano Badley, so it's hot out here.

Speaker 1

Well it's cold in here, so we'll see. Let's hope the uh, the power grade stays up, although it's been pretty good lately. I don't want to jinx it. So what can I help you with?

Speaker 4

Well, so I have an issue just popped up recently with my mouth acting kind of odd, like many times when I click it, it acts like I double clicked it. So for example, I can excel I go to click on a cell and if you double click it it opens up a like an edit function and within the cell. And so sometimes I'll just go to click on the one cell and it'll do that. Or on Chrome, I'll click the plus button to open up another window and

it'll open two and stuff like that. And I'm trying to figure out how do I I don't know, like readjust it?

Speaker 1

Did this just start?

Speaker 4

Huh?

Speaker 1

Did this just.

Speaker 4

Start just within the last like four to six weeks?

Speaker 1

And what kind of mouse? Is it? A wireless? Is it wired? Is it Mac? Is it PC?

Speaker 4

It's wired?

Speaker 5

PC?

Speaker 4

Windows?

Speaker 6

Ten?

Speaker 1

Okay? And have you tried a different mouse?

Speaker 4

Not yet.

Speaker 1

Okay, so that would be the first thing you want to do. So you gotta secure a different mouse to see if it's actually the mouse. I assume you probably don't have a secondary mouse around the house. I just want you to rhyme that.

Speaker 4

But I can probably find one.

Speaker 1

Uh yeah, I mean maybe if you have a friend or family member that has one. That would be the easiest way to troubleshoot this, because that will tell you if it's the actual mause or if it's your software and you made some sort of change. Right, So, if it's not the mouse, or if you don't feel like doing that or you can't do that, does the mouse feel any different when you click it? Like, does it feel like it's gummed up or something?

Speaker 4

No? Not really?

Speaker 1

Okay, so in that case it Now have you tried like restarting your computer? I know that sounds basic, but that's always a good start. Okay, you've done that, okay, And what about looking in your settings in the Windows? Did you check those settings to make sure that you didn't change anything?

Speaker 7

Yeah?

Speaker 4

I did, and I adjusted there's a double click speed, yes, and I adjusted that and it seemed to help a little bit. But it's still doing the same thing.

Speaker 1

And otherwise this was working just fine previously, like you've used this for a long time.

Speaker 4

Oh yeah, it's pretty old computer. I mean, that's that was one of my concerns. Is maybe just the computers getting old.

Speaker 1

Well I don't think. I don't think the mouse would double click just because the computer's getting old. Okay, So what I would do? I would I think it sounds like it's the actual physical mouse. If you're not, you know, if you're not seeing this happen in other is it only in certain program.

Speaker 4

Oh no, it happens in a variety of different programs.

Speaker 1

Okay, and you checked, you sure, you went into your Windows settings and checked and made sure that you've got all those settings proper. So what about disabling double clicking? There's some like accessibility features. Have you tried doing that?

Speaker 4

Uh no, okay, that could.

Speaker 1

Be that could be a way to do it too, to see if that will that will help.

Speaker 4

I'm not sure. I'm not sure there's I'm seeing anything that says disabled double click.

Speaker 1

I'm going into the settings here and let's see. So if we go into the mouse, primary, mouse button, mouse pointer, additional mouse settings. So let's see clicklock that might that might be something. Let's see, and then you've got your pointer. Yeah, there's a whole bunch of like little options in here. I would go into there and see if you can, if you can switch some of those things and see

what happens with that. But I would try I would try, Rod to get a secondary mouse in troubleshoot that way. If it works, then you know that, you know you've solved your problem without going through a thousand different settings and trying to figure out you know, drive yourself nuts over this situation, Okay, because that's that's frustrating. Yeah, I

know that. For me, when I'm on a Windows computer, for sure, I disable the uh, the right click situation because I feel like I'm always especially with the track pad, I'm always like right clicking when I mean to just click once. So I'll disable some of the features on there. That's one of the first things I always do is go in there and do that. So, uh, hopefully you get it figured out. Rod. Thanks for the call today.

I appreciate it, and once again, if you have a question, the phone line is triple eight rich one on one eight eight eight seven four to two four to one zero one. Earlier, I mentioned that Hollywood, almost all of Hollywood is on strike at this point. So you've got the SAG Aftra's Union and you've got the Writer's Guild, so a lot of this town is no longer working. So if your shows start to look really bad on TV, you know why, because no one's writing them. They're not

making anything new, and yeah, we're still here. If you notice that the actors are not on TV promoting stuff, they're not on the late shows anything, it's because they can't. So here is one of the interesting points. And of course it all comes down to money and AI. But one of these things is that the studios apparently want to be able to scan a background actor and then use their likeness for any project without consent or compensation.

SAG says no, no, no, no, no, we're not letting them do this, and the union says that they don't like this, and then the studio say, no, no, no, we meant we only want to scan them once to use that in that one movie, and any other use we would have to pay them. So the point of all of this is that AI is not only a huge factor in the writer's strike, with you know writers not wanting studios using AI to write scripts and drafts

and rewrites and all that good stuff. But also with the actors union, they don't want to make actors digitally or recreate them digitally. I'm telling you this AI stuff is really throwing a wrench in things. All right, coming up, we're gonna talk AI new features on Google Bard. What a transition you are listening to Rich on Tech. Welcome back to rich on Tech. Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you, talking technology and joining me now is Cissy Shao,

vice president and general manager of Assistant and Bard at Google. Cissy, thanks so much for joining me.

Speaker 6

Thanks for having me Rich.

Speaker 1

So let's talk about Google Bard. This has been around for a couple of months. Now, how is that going? This is there your AI chatbot assistant?

Speaker 6

Well yeah, Well, first of all, let's just talk about what is Bard. And Bard is Google's experiment that lets people collaborate with generative AI, and what that means is you can use Bard to boost your productivity and really

help you solve everyday problems. So, for example, we find users asking Bard to give them ideas for tailored workout plans, helping them write their resumes and prep for interviews, or even like for me, I use Bard to help write a short story for my son who loves video games.

Speaker 1

And so are people finding different uses for this or there are instructions for how to use Bard. How do you know what you can do with this?

Speaker 6

Well, when you start with bar, Bard will give you some ideas of what you can do with Bard. But really we find people find use in three different areas. One is productivity, and that can be like planning a trip that you have coming up, or planning your kids summer camp plans, or coming up with great ideas for like a meal plan. Then there's creativity, which is the second piece, which is like I said, you know, writing stories or even fiction, or coming up with great brainstorming

ideas for something that you're wanting to write. And the third is really companionship, which is just it's kind of fun to just talk to an AI sometimes about you know, anything on the top of your mind.

Speaker 1

So we've heard a lot about these assistants. You are adding some new features to Bard. Let's talk about the first new feature, which is the power of lens. So now you can actually upload a photo to Bard and it will do what with that picture.

Speaker 6

Well, first of all, people absolutely love lens, so when lens meets barred, it's really exciting. So I'll give you a story of how I use lens and Bard. I bought a new pair of sneakers and I had no idea what.

Speaker 2

To wear with those sneakers.

Speaker 6

So I take my phone out and I use lens and take a picture, and then I ask Bart, what can I wear with these shoes? And Bart I correctly identify that they were a pair of Converse and actually gave me some ideas, like maybe you can wear like a smart casual pair of jeans with this pair of shoes. So that's just one way that people can use lens. But really the sky's the limit in terms of how people want to use pictures and interact with Bard with their pictures.

Speaker 1

So the next thing it can do is talk to us, so you can have Bard read its responses to you explain what that's all about.

Speaker 6

Well, we're really excited because this is Bard's biggest expansion, both globally and also in forty languages. And so when Bard speaks to you, now Bart can actually read its response in not only in English, but in all those languages. So an example of how I use this is I have an eight year old son who really loves video games, and I thought it'd be fun to write a little story about his.

Speaker 2

Favorite characters with Bard.

Speaker 6

So I asked Bard to write a story, and then I asked Bart to read the story out loud to my son, who really thought that was really really fun.

Speaker 1

That's amazing. What is the challenge of getting an AI assistant to be able to speak so many different languages.

Speaker 6

Well, we have to get things like inflections right in different languages, and we also need to make sure that we're being culturally aware of all these different languages. So I find it fascinating that, for example, if you ask Bard for a recipe for eggs, you'll get a different type of recipe depending on what language you ask.

Speaker 1

Barred forty six different languages in total, including Arabic, Chinese, German, Hindi, and Spanish. That's incredible.

Speaker 6

Yeah, we're really excited with what people can do with both language expansion and global expansion. There's another feature that I want to share, which is something we call pinning and sharing. So let's say you know you're using Bard to create a meal plan for the week for yourself. We find users do a lot of this kind of planning and work with Bard, and you then go to work, and then you go to the grocery store and you need to now buy the recipe ingredients for that meal plan that you use.

Speaker 2

Bard to create.

Speaker 6

Now you can go back to Bard's pin threads and actually just get that meal plan right up on your phone when you're at the grocery store. And you can also then share that same meal plan. Let's say you want to share on social media, like this is the new meal plan that I'm following. You can also use our new sharing feature to share that same conversation that you had with Bard directly on social media.

Speaker 1

So by remembering some of these things you've asked, it's no longer this ephemeral sort of conversation. You can revisit it. Do you think that makes for a more personalized experience for the user?

Speaker 6

Oh, definitely. People are asking us for pinning and saving and also to be able to bring back personal things that they're doing with Bard. You know, I talked about meal plans, but people use Bard to prep for job interviews and write their resumes. People come up with business ideas like there's a user who's thinking about how to rename their new online water bottle store that they're starting

on the internet. I have a friend who's using a bar to come up with basketball drills for a little third grade basketball team that he coaches, And so there's all these different things that people are doing with BARD. And being able to both remember those conversations and also share those conversations is something we're really excited about.

Speaker 1

Since you're an engineer and a computer scientist, what excites you the most about the possibilities of AI like Bard?

Speaker 6

I mean, this is going to change the world, right, This is going to make people way more productive and help them explore their imaginations and creativity in really unique ways. I'm excited because I hear from users that they're able to save time and effort and in working using Bard to accomplish their goals. So that really excites me. How this is going to change how people do things.

Speaker 1

Should we feel guilty because sometimes it seems almost too easy to use these tools? Should we feel guilty about relying on them at all?

Speaker 6

I think that, you know, humans have always created technology and tools to make our lives more fun and interesting and also easier, and to save time. I mean, think about the Internet or search or the phone. Right, these are all innovations that have made life more easy, and I think of BART and AI as just another generation of that. Right, Why do in you know, an hour

what you can do in five to ten minutes. But it's important to remember that BART is a collaborator for you, like it's an AI to help you get done what you want to get done. And so really the human is in control and really is the one that's directing the AI.

Speaker 1

Now. Of course, we want these AI assistants to be useful, but also we want them to be honest, and ethics is a big part of that. So how is your team working to make Barred ethical?

Speaker 6

Well, first of all, we want to take a bold and responsible approach to AI, and that's why we've been really measured and careful about how we launch BART. So, for example, we first launched BART in English because we hadn't done the responsibility work yet in all those other languages, measuring you know if Bart is going to say things that are inappropriate, for example, culturally or in those languages.

And so what we do is really work to train bar to be responsible and abide by our AI ethics that we've published.

Speaker 1

To the world, and I would like to know your advice for young people out there that want to pursue careers along the lines of AI.

Speaker 6

Well, first of all, AI is exploding, and even us at the sort of the edge of that are still learning what AI can do. And so I would just say, get really curious about the tools. Go try the tools for yourself. Ask it questions that you may not expect it to be able to do. Like so, for example, for Lens, I took a picture of my bookshelf and I said, this is my book collection, Like what other books.

Speaker 5

Might I like?

Speaker 6

And not only did Bard understand that I had a bunch of business and personal development books on my bookshelf, it actually gave me some advice on new books that I might try in the same genre. So just there's just some incredible like capabilities, and so I would just say my advice is go try things out, play with it, learn with it as we're all learning together how AI works.

Speaker 1

Cissi Shao, vice president and general manager of Assistant and Bard at Google, Thanks so much for joining me today.

Speaker 6

Thanks for having me Rich so excited.

Speaker 1

All right, more Rich on tech coming your way. Give me a call if you have a question about technology. The phone number is triple eight Rich one oh one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one. Welcome back to a Rich on tech. Rich DeMuro here hanging out talking technology with you. Let's go to Marcie in Rancho Cucamonga, California. Marcie, you're on with Rich.

Speaker 8

Hello. I went to say, I really enjoyed the precitation on Bard just now what you can do and suggestions, and also it's ethnic concerns and how they develop it in different language to adapt to that culture. But I have a concern. I am part of a large number of people in California that had their data breached. My name, my birth date, my social Security number, and my ZIP code. So I called up my people that have my four oh one K account and talk to that about him.

So they asked me if I you know I had I wanted a duo often take authentication, and so they asked me if I wanted voice recognition, and I said no, So we settled on a password and then I don't know, maybe that day or the next day, I had another question. So I called back and I went through my name. You know, you still have to give your social Security number, your name and all that stuff. And the person hesitated, and I said, is anything wrong? And she said, we

don't recognize your voice? Oh wow, So I didn't okay that number one, number two, it didn't recognize my voice. And I said, good, I have a password.

Speaker 1

Good. Yeah, I said no to that when I got that option. Hey, do you want us to make a fingerprint of your voice?

Speaker 9

No?

Speaker 8

Yeah, So I guess my concern is I just want to say, you know, I have a concern about security issues. So you know, that's something that's going to have to you know, just like the actors not letting their image taken later on and done something with you know, I think.

Speaker 1

Yeah, I get it to be through. Yeah, And look, and all these companies are going to try to do what they can because it makes their lives easier, you know, if they if they can run this authentication. Supposedly it's in our favor, but let's be honest, is it really At the end of the day, they're protecting their assets, you know, their their accounts and all this stuff. And I have no doubt that the voice recognition stuff is probably pretty good. But I'm just not sure I'm ready

for that just yet. You know, it's one of these things where it's it's pretty new, and I'm seeing it in more and more companies. When you call up they say, hey, do you mind if we use your voice to authenticate you? I say no, And I'm not saying you have to say no, but I do see the concerns with that. Do they share that information? Who stores that now? Earlier in the show, you know, I played my AI voice on.

Speaker 8

The iPhone's That's why I called right.

Speaker 1

Away, because it's really fascinating that now anyone will be able to create one of these. And by the way, the iPhone is just one of a thousand tools that you can easily find online that will do something similar. There are many many AI startups that will help you create an AI voice of yourself. So the iPhone is just putting it in a lot of people's hands. And by the way, I didn't really think it sounded like me.

Speaker 8

But either, however, I mean, technology is going to develop.

Speaker 1

Yeah, it's day one, right, it's not even day one because this isn't even public it's a public beta, So iOS seventeen doesn't even happen until the fall. So the bottom line, Marcy, I think is is here's what we're learning. Number one, you had this data breach. So your information is out there and it's probably your social Security number, your name, your phone number, your email, user names, passwords, all that stuff could be potentially in this breach. Right,

So how do you protect yourself? What remedies did they give you for this breach? Do you know?

Speaker 8

I actually the lines are so busy. This is well the California State.

Speaker 10

Teachers, that's a lot of it.

Speaker 8

You can imagine how many people.

Speaker 5

I don't know.

Speaker 8

If somebody my friend call it took her two and a half hours on hold and they didn't have a callback number. So I've done some things I don't know.

Speaker 1

Okay, So I'm looking.

Speaker 8

At I'm not sure I want to say this on right.

Speaker 1

Well, they're saying that they want you to put a fraud alert on your credit reports. So I'm trying to see if they've listed the information. Okay, okay, the files contained contained the name and social security numbers, date of birth, and zip codes of certain calisters. Is that it is that? What it's called Calsters members and beneficiaries?

Speaker 11

Oh?

Speaker 1

Okay, So it's not even just you, it's also the people that you are trying to give your money to as a beneficiary. Now their number in their soci security number.

Speaker 8

So also CalPERS, which is a California public employees.

Speaker 1

Okay, so here here's my recommendation with this. I actually use Google if you pay Google for something called Google One. So if you have like any sort of storage with Google, they actually offer a service where they will they will they will scan the dark web for your information. So Google, of course is always crawling the web every day to

see what's new. They can have a service where they will alert you if your information comes up in their search, and they will look for your name, your address, your phone number, your email, your social security number, you username and password. Wow, I can't speak today, and so I have signed up for this service. The only thing, and this is similar to something like a LifeLock or any of these nor insecurity services, right. Uh, the only thing is you have to give them your information so that

they can look for it exactly. And so that's where I have the problem with all you know, whatever, this free year of credit monitoring they gave you, you probably have to hand over all your personal information to this company and so that's where I say no.

Speaker 8

And so of the it's one of the three, you know, it's one of the three credit bureaus that they will give us a your free and so when my teacher friends is up, I'm not doing that, yeah.

Speaker 1

Because then you have to give Now the credit bureaus have your info. But I think the monitoring service is probably a separate entity from the standard you know, reporting service. So where does that leave us, Marcia? I think what you have to do and I think it's just a matter of good privacy hygiene. The less you give out your information, the more protected you potentially are. So what does that mean when someone asks for your social just think do I need to give this to that business,

that person, that company, whatever it is. Same thing with email address. We're seeing now this idea of your email address is becoming part of your identity as well your phone number. It's all part of your identity. So the more that you can get this stuff off of these databases and off of the web in general, the better you're going to be. Now, we can't help it when a company has a data breach, there's nothing we can do. That information is out there. It will continue to just

percolate throughout the web. People buy lists, They use this information to text us and to scam us and to fish us, and so you really have to be vigilant about making sure that you keep your information out of there. I'm going to put the link to this Google. If you do pay for any storage on Google, you can use this Google one service to scan the dark web. Now for me personally, let me tell you, oh, actually it's not even even for non members. You can do this.

So Google one members will get let's see one email address, so they will scan for your email address and you can review the results. But if you're a Google one member, you can do your soci security number, your name, your data birth, your address, up to ten emails and up to ten phone numbers. So if you go to one dot Google dot com and under dark Web report, you can click try now and then run scan and it

will show you your information. Of course, I'll put all this on the website linked up at richon tech dot tv. But that's just one of these services. There are many of these services that can help you with this. Try to get your information off of these public databases. You can do it yourself. You can subscribe to a service that will do it. But again, the less you give out, the better you're going to be. And I would definitely

look into using hidden email addresses. So this is another thing that people are rapidly sort of understanding, is instead of giving out your real email address when you sign up for a website, you use what's called a hidden or a cloaked email address. And what that means is that it's almost like a password. It's a one time email address that will only work for that website. So Marci, thanks for the call. And it's just one of these things where we really have to be on guard. So ah, man,

this stuff is so concerning with the information. It's just everywhere I mean you go, I get these these little alerts and it's just like, oh, your email address came up here, your password came up here. Can reuse the same password twice? I will say that again, do not reuse the same password twice. I feel like a broken record when I say that, because people want to make things easy, and you shouldn't make it easy because the easier you make it for yourself, the easier you make

it for hackers. The other thing to know, turn on two factor authentication, do it yesterday. Turn it on. I'm telling you all right. More on the website rich on Tech dot TV. More of your calls at triple eight Rich one O one eight eight eight seven four to two, four to one zero one. You're doing something smart today. You are listening to rich on Tech. Welcome back to rich on Tech. Let's go to Let's go to Ted in Fountain Valley, California. Ted, You're on with rich Welcome to the show.

Speaker 10

Hi, rich Ria. I've been using an old Windows seven laptop for the last thirteen years. I'm now replacing it with a new Windows eleven laptop. But over the last thirteen years, I've accumulated a lot of software on my old laptop. I'm trying to figure out if I'm able to just transfer that software to the new laptop, or do I need to go out and buy the very same programs a second time for the new Windows eleven laptop.

Speaker 1

Well, it all depends on the software. So some software will let you transfer it over, some will not, and it all sort of depends on how they run their program So, as you might expect, I switch devices a lot, I move things around a lot, and I run into some software that allows you to activate on multiple devices. Other software that only allows you to activate on one device at a time. Some software that maybe wants you to rebuy, or it's a subscription based or it's you know,

whatever it is. So it's really going to depend on the programs themselves. So what I would do is make a list of your programs and sort of investigate each program and what their deal is. So let's say it's I'm just trying to see on my computer here, what do I have like something like you know, if it's free. Now you said you got this over thirteen years, so some of this software may be outdated for the new computer. Depends on do they have an updated model, do they

have an updated system for this? So it really depends on the software. And so what I would do is I would just go through each software program, make a list of all the programs that you have, and just go through and go on Google and go to the software website and see what it says. So say, you know, transfer to a new device, or what your account is. Some of these will have an activation code that you'll need to use. Other may not. But it really is

going to depend on the software that you're installing. On the new computer. So a lot of the new software nowadays is all subscription based, and so they want to make you pay to use that software, and they sort of decide can you install that on multiple devices? Can you install it on just one device? And sometimes it's even slick enough where when you install it on one device, it stops working on the previous device. So it's really going to depend on the software and how they have

it set up. The other thing is that because you've been accumulating the software for so long, there may be some products that are available as a website or as a web based software that you may be able to switch to kind of easily to do that as well. So I've seen it all. It just really depends how they have things set up. But that's quite The upgrade Windows seven to Windows eleven is a big one, and so that is going to be a big change for you.

But that's thirteen years on your last laptop is a pretty good run, so I think you've done pretty well. But yeah, definitely make a list of the software that you have before you move to the new laptop. It sounds like you'll probably have this old laptop with you. For myself, what I usually do is I'll take screenshots of my system before I switched to the new computer, so that way I can see how I had everything

set up. I can see all the different programs that I had installed, and then I can easily go through and reinstall those programs on the new computer. And these days it's gotten pretty good a lot of times. If you had some sort of activation code with a program, you can go to the website, type in your email address, and they'll send you a new activation code. So it again just sort of depends on the program that you're using how they decide to do that. So good question, Ted.

Thanks for calling in today from Fountain Valley. If you have a question, give me a call. The phone lines are open. It's triple eight rich one oh one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one. Let's talk Amazon Prime Day. Did you just shop on Amazon Prime Day? The data is in July eleventh and twelfth. Amazon Prime Day twenty twenty three, July eleventh, the first day has now set a new single sales record for Amazon.

They've never had a bigger sales day in history. Over two days, Prime members bought over three hundred and seventy five million items. Now this is the funny part. Amazon doesn't say how much was sold. They only say how much was saved. Members saved over two point five billion dollars. Top selling categories included home, fashion, beauty, popular deal, We're on AirPods, some sort of like deep cleaner from Bissel, and lip gloss. Pretty random there. The most popular thing

that people bought was a Fire TV stick. That is huge because that means that a lot of people are using these streaming sticks, which we know, but Fire TV stick, because it's so prevalent and because it's so cheap, it is becoming the platform to be with streaming. And Amazon knows this. They are really secretly building a huge TV platform.

And what does that mean later on advertising? They can control the advertising that people see on that Fire TV stick, and that means they've got a lot of bargaining power with these streaming websites and apps. Let's see, now that's Amazon's information. Then we have Adobe and as they get receipts from a lot of different people through different methods, and so they tallied up the data. They don't specifically

cite Prime Day. They don't have necessarily like here's what people ordered on Amazon, but they know what people ordered in general. And total Prime Day spending this year twelve point seven billion dollars, up six percent over last year. So on July twelfth, Day two spending hit six point three billion dollars in one day. People were just pouring money into Amazon on July twelfth and the eleventh. Let's

see discounts electronics, apparel, and toys. Of course, twenty percent of orders use curb side pickup, which was something that sort of started during the pandemic. And have you tried this, this curb side pickup. You basically order the stuff in the app and then you drive up to target. You order anywhere. I mean so many stores have this now, where you drive up and someone runs out to your car.

We did this the other day for Fast Food. Place the order on the phone and you drive up and you just wait in that spot and they bring your food out. And by the way, if you're not downloading the app for the retailer that you're shopping at, I highly recommend you do it. You know why, because they're trying to get people to use their apps, and what

does that mean? They are putting discounts inside the app I'm telling you, any story you go to, whether it's Target, whether it is Best Buy, whether it is a fast food place, download the app. All these quick service restaurants, all of the coupons and discounts are inside the apps. So you take five extra minutes to download the app and place your order that way, I'm telling you it

will save you money. We went to a sub shop the other day and you go into the subshop, there's no discounts, there's no nothing, and you go inside the app. It's by one get on free. So just take the extra time to download the app and do this, and when you sign up again, sign up with unique email address, unique password, and save that information in your phone so you can use it later. Forty four point eight percent of sales came from smartphones, so now we're talking almost

fifty percent of people are shopping from their phones. And that's through not just Amazon Prime, but all shopping, So that's pretty wild. Amazon Prime started out as a celebration of Amazon's birthday, and now it's become the largest shopping event of the summer and one of the largest shopping events of the year. So Amazon literally created a shopping event out of nothing. It used to be of Best Reviews.

Jacob Palmer of Best Reviews last week mentioned that it calls it the Turkey Five, the five days between Thanksgiving and the you know, the Monday, those five shopping days. It used to be just Black Friday. Now it's that entire Like as soon as people are done at the Turkey dinner, they're like out the door shopping. I don't think I've ever shopped on Thanksgiving, but it's happening. Okay, coming up, we got lots more to talk about. We

got a maze VR. Lance Drake and Cook Kim are going to join us to talk about a new VR concert app. If you have one of these VR headsets, you gotta download this app. It is called a maze VR and they have their first concert inside there. It is a Zara Larson. I experienced it. It was incredible. I mean it was a private VR concert just for me, but anyone that can experience it, it's really really cool. Later on in the show, we've got Ben Sam. I'm very excited to have Ben on the show. This guy

travels more than anyone I know. He's always testing out new smartphones and he does a really good job, very very fair and he's very worldly as well, so he's going to join me to talk about a nothing phone too. But of course we have more of your calls at triple eight Rich one oh one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two four one zero one. Give me a call if you have a question about technology. You are listening to rich on Tech. Welcome back to rich

on Tech. Rich Demiro here hanging out with you talking technology. You can follow me on social media. I am at rich on Tech. I'm on Instagram, I'm on Facebook, I'm on Twitter, and yes, I'm still on threads. Last week it was yes I'm still on Twitter. Now this week it's yes, I'm still on threads. I'll be honest. Threads is uh. I don't know is it happening? Are people still using it? I'm getting a lot of spam on threads,

a lot of spam, not too much interaction. So I think my theory is that Threads is sort of the Instagram crowd, and the Instagram crowd is not necessarily the Twitter crowd, and so I don't know where does that leave us. It leaves me where. I deleted Threads from my home screen and replaced it with Twitter again because Twitter feels like it's a Twitter crowd. They're people that want information, they are people that want updates. People that

are on threads are Instagram people. Instagram people want Instagram stories, they want Instagram photos and reels. And so it's gotten very confusing because I think a lot of people signed up because it was easy, but then there are they still staying there and I'm not the only one. According to some estimates of different reports, let's see, time spent on threads has dropped over fifty percent from twenty minutes to eight minutes, according to some numbers from sensor Tower

and similar web. And let's see. A Meta spokesperson told Gizmoto in an email, while it's early days, we're excited about the initial success, which they were. They were touting one hundred million sign ups. But out of those hundred million people, who is still actually using it on a daily basis? I don't know. And then Elon Musk tweeted out, let's see, do I have his tweet somewhere here? Probably I thought I did, but I guess I don't. But he tweeted out that the usage on Twitter was up,

like they were reaching new records. So I don't know. It's a battle. It's tough. I think at the end of the day, it's tough for you, the consumer, because nobody wants to sit there and check one hundred different apps every day. We want to check a couple And it's already tough enough that we've got Facebook and Instagram and Twitter and YouTube shorts and TikTok and email and sms and dms, and it just goes on and on. So we'll see. I'm not gonna say Threads is dead's

but you know, we'll see what happens with it. We're gonna have to follow that one. Let's take a question here, Let's go to Let's go to Kathy. Kathy in Duarte. You're on with Rich.

Speaker 5

Hi Hi, Rich.

Speaker 12

So my question is, actually it's a statement. First, I use a Mac and I use the email. I use yahus on my Mac because I prefer it, and at least I did it until last night when I went in to compose a new document rather than the old format. It puts me inside the little box that says new message. And I'm trying to and I didn't click anything to make this happen, and I try to go into help to figure out how to go back into the old format, and I'm just not able to figure it out.

Speaker 1

So they redesigned.

Speaker 12

Design. Yeah, when I click on an email, it comes out it looks exactly like it used to. But when I click on compose, I get the little box that I never liked, a little box. So that's why I didn't use the mail function that came on my map. I went, I switched right to Yahoo, and now it's reminding me of the one I switched away from.

Speaker 1

Oh no, okay. And so when you when you compose a message, it's composing it in a little window versus a larger window, right.

Speaker 12

As opposed to going into that email where you can click reply, right, it's this new message too, and then subjects and you can attach documents and whatever on the bottom. But I prefer to have the old email in case I'm addressing it to something. And this is like it's a brand of email, no matter what.

Speaker 1

And so does it look like the entire website has changed because I'm looking I'm looking inside, you know, on anything about Yahoo mail redesigned, and I don't see anything for like a year.

Speaker 12

That's so interesting because it just happened yesterday. And everything still looks the same to me. You know, I'm wondering, maybe I should just, rather than restart, just close down everything. And then is there a way to go out of y'allhoo email and then go back into it and maybe the old Parmatt will come back.

Speaker 1

Yeah, Well, there's a couple of things you can do. Would I would see, look in your settings and see if there's a way to revert to classic view. There might be Sometimes when these whenever there's a big change with any sort of online service, they typically know that people do not like change, right. We are creatures of habit. We like things to look the way they look, and it takes a while for us to adapt to the new newness of things. So what I would do is look at.

Speaker 12

One of the things I did try was I did click on the three little dots inside of an email. Actually, when I did it last night, it would say revert to classics. Yeah, I was supposed to look to look for where it said revert to classic but it does not give me that option.

Speaker 1

Oh so it doesn't even give you that option. Well maybe, so I'm wondering if what happened was maybe you didn't have maybe you were on the long runway of the new you know, when I said I looked this up, it said it was a year ago that they kind of read, you know, changed things. So maybe you were on that grace period and that grace period has ended, and so now that option to go back to the old way is just not there. So the only thing I could recommend is perhaps using a different app or

something to access your email on your computer. I know you said you didn't like the included email app on your Mac, but there are some other ones. The one that I think a lot of people like is Edison Mail, So that's one that people like. There's so many, I mean, there's Spark. There's a lot of different email providers for the for the Mac computer. So maybe check out some of the just options there and maybe you'll like something that's a little bit different. You know, you can go

with Thunderbird. There's Outlook if you want. Actually, you know what, I might recommend this to you since it's free, I would just maybe try micro Soft Outlook and connect your account to that. So just search for Microsoft Outlook on the Mac. You can download that app and it just came out with it it's brand new and it's like a very classic email app and you can log in with your Yahoo account that way and check it there. And so hopefully Kathy you'll like that better. But I agree,

we don't like change. It's when these things change, people don't like it. No one likes change, but it happens to the best of us. All right. Coming up next, we're going to talk to a maze VR about how you can experience concerts in virtual reality. And if you have a call or if you have a question, give me a call at Triple eight rich one on one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two, four to

one zero one. Welcome back to rich On Tech. Rich Demiro here with you on the Sony backlot in Culver City, California. This is where they record a lot of music and also you may have heard of a couple of shows that they do here called Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy. I'm sitting here with Lance Drake is the creative director at Amazed VR.

Speaker 3

Lance, thanks so much for joining me.

Speaker 13

Thanks thanks for being here.

Speaker 1

Yeah, so let's talk about this concert that I just experienced in virtual reality. I was in a Metaquest headset and Zara Larson was literally inches away from my face, singing and dancing. Explain to me what I just experienced.

Speaker 14

Yeah, so you just got a preview of our Zara Larson VR concert experience and this is the launch and a preview of our home app, and we represent the future of VR concerts.

Speaker 13

We offer the highest.

Speaker 14

Quality and stereo fidelity and immersiveness and it's it's, in my opinion, a completely new medium for musicians to explore and get closer than ever to their fans.

Speaker 13

So we've heard about VR before.

Speaker 1

There's been a lot of starts and stops with VR, but now that Apple is coming out with a headset, it seems to have legitimatized this technology. Where are we with view?

Speaker 14

You know, I think we're at the beginning of VR, and that's what's most exciting is that the possibilities are endless and it's kind of a new level of experimentation and communication. And I think that's why Apple's entering now, is because this represents raising the ceiling for the way people communicate and use digital tools. And what's really exciting about the Apple launch is that they always bring the human touch to it, and I think that's what is.

Speaker 13

Going to be the breaking point is that.

Speaker 14

You know, in the past couple of years, we've been given the promise of the metaverse and what is the metaverse?

Speaker 13

And it's not really defined.

Speaker 14

And honestly, that humanity and that human spirit, which we're also exploring in our application, I think represents the future of VR.

Speaker 1

So the concert that I experienced was not like your typical concert. It was almost like a solo performance just for the person that's watching. And I'm sitting there and Zara Larsen is in some sort of virtual reality set. Explain to me how this is different than a typical concert you would go to or just see in VR. Yeah.

Speaker 14

So we shoot on the highest quality stereo cameras and we place the artists in the most immercible and dynamic CG environments. So unlike other metaverse or other digital experiences that typically either are an avatar representation of a person or of a musician, this is the artist singing to you and performing to you. It's better than a front row seat at a concert. But it's also different. It's

a completely new media. I'm really excited for what we're hoping every artist across the world to just roll up their sleeves and create this whole new genre of communication and creation.

Speaker 1

You call it a whole new genre, and it really is, because it felt like the most intimate experience you could have with an artist. They're performing just for you. That is different than anything we've seen before. If you're at a concert, they're very far from you. If you are watching a music video, it's kind of a music video. This is almost an entirely new way of experiencing your favorite artist. Do you think people will take a liking to that. Yeah?

Speaker 13

Absolutely.

Speaker 14

You know, it's all about super fans now and fandom and every fan of their favorite artist, and any fan they're detail obsessed. They want to know the wardrobe, they want to know the designer. They want to know the nails and the makeup artists and the shoes, and they want to be immersed in the world and the lore and the story of music. And you know, our company is detail obsessed. And it's almost like a dream state.

You're somewhere in between reality and in this highly customized bespoke show that's for the fan, and it's also giving fans permission to look because you're making direct eye contact with your favorite artists.

Speaker 13

And how much is a meet and greet.

Speaker 14

These days to get a handshake backstage for a moment.

Speaker 13

This is for fans to return to forever.

Speaker 14

I think as a kid, if I had the chance to see Michael Jackson Moonwalk, if I had a chance at the Motown twenty five, or I had the chance to see Madonna where the bride like a virgin dress. Our company represents a chance for artists to be forever.

Speaker 1

How do you get the app? And how much does an experience like this cost?

Speaker 14

So Our May's VR app has launched and it's available on Meta headsets and Steam and will soon be coming to Peico and all major VR headsets. We're already dev toolkitting to on board to the Apple headset when it's ready to launch, and we're just really excited to give fans access to their favorite artists in ways that were unimaginable before.

Speaker 1

Tell me about the world that I was experiencing, because you've got this real life person, but it seemed to be in a virtual world she was in.

Speaker 13

That's part of the dream like state of our shows.

Speaker 14

And I think the differential between what we've created anything that's been done before is that artists are performing live in a CG environment, and I say it's a dream state because it's completely controlled. You're not seeing the rigging of the lighting, you're not seeing the scuffs in the floor. You're seeing perfection, and it's timed to the music, and it's almost this perfect moment. And it's all about that

moment of connection and complete immersion in this world. And you know, we collaborate with artists and we help to help them to design these worlds, and we do it all in house at the moment, and I think eventually the dream is for artists to go off shoot their own shows, ingest it into our platform and soon maybe one day everyone will be able to create their own VR concert and their own worlds to bring to the masses.

Speaker 1

That's interesting. So you're saying someone even at home might potentially be able to do this and release something like this.

Speaker 13

But like I mean, we're looking really far ahead.

Speaker 14

But if you look at the trajectory of two D content, the revolution and YouTube was someone like Justin Bieber performing in his living room or in his bedroom and knowing how to connect to the camera in a way that was very distinct and special. You have to imagine once vrs to the masses and people know that tool set and how to communicate, they'll be able to use what we've created to build their own worlds and light their own stages.

Speaker 13

And that's the dream.

Speaker 1

Okay, that's really something I didn't think about. This is an entirely new medium that people can create for in their homes. Because if you think about it, you may not even need a green screen in the future. Your AI will be able to just take my form and put it somewhere.

Speaker 14

A lot of the secret sauce of our company is actually our AI tool set, and it's a lot of auto keying, it's a lot of upresing, it's future proofing the technology, and it's also eventually going to allow us to shoot in a variety of spaces. And we'll also be working on design tools, opening up maybe eventually to the public to where someone in their home and then create their own Amazed VR concert.

Speaker 1

Let's bring in Cook Kim, head of production at Amazed VR. Thanks for joining me as well. Nice to meet you too, Cook. What do you want people to know when they watch this because it looks very fluid, it's very seamless, and it looks like you guys have been doing this forever but this is still pretty new.

Speaker 15

Yeah, I think always the challenge is with like VR. Obviously, I think there's not much people who worked a long time and for your format, the video format is selfish is very different, and I think the most challenging part is the sterele So having the perfect aligned left and right footage will give that vividness and immersiveness and the feeling that the actual, real human size person is right front of me.

Speaker 1

Are you excited to get this into the eyes of people out there?

Speaker 15

Previously, I think VR was mostly only used for entertainments and like gaming, especially gaming heavy. With like Apple announcement, I was really excited because now this technology is going beyond just gaming. It's just trying to coming closer to like regular people's life, using for work and other like

everything in our lives. So yeah, I'm pretty excited. I'm just curious how people will react to our app and also I think it'll be a great way for artists and fans and I just want their action fast.

Speaker 1

Cook Kim and Lance Drake of Amazed VR, thanks so much for joining me. You gotta check this app out. It is very impressive. If you can get your hands on a VR headset or you have one. It's called a maze VR. You gotta see what I saw. Go to the website to download it. I'll put the link at Richontech dot TV. More rich on Tech coming up right after this. Welcome back to rich on Tech. Rich Demiro here talking technology with you at Triple A Rich one oh one. That's eight eight eight seven four to

two four one zero one. If you have a question about technology, give me a call. Phone lines are open. Let's go to Kerrie in uh Is it Sanni Yanez, California?

Speaker 4

Yes?

Speaker 1

Perfect, I love that area. Beautiful.

Speaker 5

It is beautiful. We're very lucky to live here. And thank you for being there. That's helpful.

Speaker 1

Well, thank you, thanks for holding. I know you're on for a while. What can I help?

Speaker 5

I was listening to your show and I thought, maybe this man can help me with my problem. I have a friend who's ninety three, and she's wonderful and she loves watching the chor to France and decided she needed a TV in her kitchen so she could do that. So we got a new TV. We hooked it up, Comcast came and got it all wired. Everything's great, except when we changed the volume to make it a little louder, and she's not hard of hearing. She hears better than

I do. The little lady in the TV tells us it is not a smart TV, it's just a regular new or TV. It tells us that, yes, your volume is up or whatever, and shows the little bar It works both with the Comcast remote and the regular one that came with the TV. But the volume doesn't hold there. As she watches, it eventually reverts to the level that was on before. So we're not sure where the problem is and how to fix it.

Speaker 1

Huh. So as she's listening to the the TV, the volume's just gradually slowly going down.

Speaker 5

Correct?

Speaker 1

Huh? And so does this happen on every channel or just the Tour de France.

Speaker 5

Good question, because she's only watched so far as far as I know, because she lives alone. She's amazing. I'll ask her if she has the same problem on other channels.

Speaker 1

Well, I certainly have heard of volume issues on TVs where the volume goes up and down based on commercials or programming, or some people can't hear the dialogue. I mean, those are all very common. But the fact that the volume is going down as she's listening, does it get to a spot where she can no longer hear it?

Speaker 5

No, doesn't go that far. It just sort of reverts to a level that's not terrible. I mean, she says, it's I'm living with it, but it's kind of weird.

Speaker 1

Yeah, if you set the volume at a certain level, of the volume should stay at that level.

Speaker 5

That's what we thought.

Speaker 1

Now here's my other question. When she's having this issue happen. Is there anything on the TV that shows that the volume's going down?

Speaker 5

No? No, the bar does not come back. The bar disappears, you know, after you first ask it to do whatever.

Speaker 1

Okay, Now here's my other question. Is the volume through the box or through the TV?

Speaker 5

So through the TV?

Speaker 1

Okay, because sometimes these cable boxes will use their own sort of volume and then the TV is secondary. So here's here's my quick sort of solution that you can try. Is I understand that you're using the remote that the cable box came with to adjust the volume? Correct?

Speaker 5

Well, we tried both. Oh, you have tried both and they do both work.

Speaker 1

Okay. Yeah, I was gonna say, because I think what's happening is the cable box sends a signal out to the TV with and so what cable companies have done over the years, because people have sort of issues in general with audio and connecting and making sure that the cable box controls the TV as a universal remote, what they've done to get around that is the cable box itself will adjust the volume up and down the signal that it's sending to the TV, so that even though

it seems like you're adjusting it, you're actually just adjusting the cable box volume. So the volume on the TV is sort of separate. So I would try I know you said you did this, but I would try setting the volume on the TV. Does it bring up the same exact menu?

Speaker 5

Uh? Not quite sure how to answer that. You get a bar?

Speaker 1

Yeah, because I feel like I'm curious if you get the same bar with both because if you're.

Speaker 5

Good question, I'm not there now, so I can't tell you.

Speaker 1

Because if you get the bar with the cable box or one or the other, then they may be independent volumes from each other. Oh wow, you know what I mean, Like the TV may have Now. I don't think the TV is anything to do with this. I think that the TV is innocent. I think that the TV. The TV is not the culprit here. I do believe it's the cable box and it either has some sort of

leveling function that's happening or something is adjusting it. She wouldn't happen to have a cat that's stepping on this remote, would she, because that happens in my house. We have we've foster kittens and they step on the remote and

they change things, and it's really unfortunate. Okay, So what I would do to try to figure this out is I would go into the settings on the cable box and look for anything to do with audio, and in specifically anything to do with audio leveling or audio limiting or dialogue, and I would change those settings and see because I think that this cable box is somehow switching the settings. That's that's my theory.

Speaker 5

That sounds like a good idea. We tried the settings on the TV. I cannot find how to get to the settings on the cable box.

Speaker 1

Well, on the cable remote, there should be either a menu There should be there should be a menu button on there. You may not, you may not have looked for that, but that's what I would look for and see. I think the cable box is the culprit here. That's my theory.

Speaker 5

Okay, I will try it and she will be very appreciative.

Speaker 1

Yeah, and call me back and let me know, because I really I'm this is like, this is stumping, Like I want to drive there, like I might have to do a wine tasting trip and just stop.

Speaker 5

We could manage that.

Speaker 1

I may have to like figure it because now you've really got me thinking about this. So the good news is about this show, there's other people listening that may be like, rich this is how we fix this. And so hopefully in the next week in the feedback segment, someone's listening that says, I know how to fix this. Andy, They say, this is what I did. But in the meantime, I think, look in those menu settings for anything with audio on the cable box and see what the deal

is with that. But Carrie, hopefully we can figure this out.

Speaker 5

Thank you very much, and thank you for your help. Ver love yourself.

Speaker 1

Thank you so much. Good luck with that one, all right? Eighty eight rich one on one eight eight eight seven four to two four to one zero one. Man, that one really really stumped me. Man, I want to know what's causing that TV to go up and down in the volume. Leslie is in Laguna Beach. Leslie, you're on with Rich.

Speaker 11

Hey Rich, thanks for taking my call.

Speaker 1

Yeah, help you.

Speaker 11

I use the app meant to track my expenses because it coordinates with the bank and everything, and so I can have everything in one spot. And the last few months my connection with Chase banks. They say that you have to reconnect, which has happened before with other banks or other accounts. But the difference this time is that when it reconnected, it deleted all of my data three

months before. That's annoying and I looked at up online and people are having a problem, but there's no response from ment on what's happening or how you can get that back.

Speaker 1

No, and this has been going on forever. Well, I mean you may or may not be able to get it back because Chase only offers a certain amount of data transactions through the service, and so they may they may only and I don't know if it's ninety days or thirty days. But the beauty of Mint is that they keep those transactions for the year, and if you delete them, you go to do your taxes at the end of the year, and it's all gone. So I've used Mint forever. I think that it's been It was

better when it was independent. Now it's owned by Into It. It's kind of like, you know, it's they're trying to get you to pay, trying to get you to pay for stuff. So you can't reconnect your Chase because sometimes you just reconnect and the stuff is back in there.

Speaker 11

Now it happens three times now, And what are.

Speaker 1

You using for this? What are you doing on Mint?

Speaker 8

Like?

Speaker 1

Are you just trying to see your value or you just are you like your your financials or are you trying to actually budget through this?

Speaker 11

No, I'm not budgeting, but I use at the track line expenses of the categories. Okay, So at the end of each month, I look at the category total and I transfer it to an Excel spreadsheet so I can compare months to months and year to year.

Speaker 1

Okay. The only thing I can do is offer you some some alternatives to Mint. But I would I would try to delete this log in and maybe change your password on Chase and then relink it because it should work. Mint is pretty big and so is Chase, and I think they work pretty well together. If it was a different bank, I might say other some other things. You can look at every dollar and there's one called personal capital, which I think they call them power. Now check those out.

You're listening to rich on Tech. Welcome back to rich on Tech. Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you, talking technology. Phone lines are open at triple eight rich one O one. That's eight eight eight seven four to two four to one zero one. Hello at Richontech dot tv. Is the email address. I've got all of your feedback for the feedback segment coming up. We're going to talk about some of the things that you email me, and you can follow me on social media. I'm on Instagram, Facebook, Twitter,

and threats at rich on Tech and the website. Don't forget rich on Tech dot tv. Totally new fresh. Just go in there. It's got that like you know, fresh minty smell because it's so new and clean, so fresh and so clean. We got Ben send this hour to talk about the Nothing Phone two. It's been a while since I've seen such a unique smartphone hit the market, and this is one of them. We'll see what Ben

thinks about this phone. He is a reviewer for XDA and also his own YouTube channel and speaking of watching stuff, on TV. Roku Channel now on Google TV, so if you have a Google TV device, you can download the Roku channel. If you're not familiar with the Roku channel, it's one of these channels that gives you a lot of stuff to watch for free, more than eighty thousand

free movies and programs, including original programming. They've got the Al Weird Al Story, They've got a movie about that, They've got the Great American Baking Show, and three hundred and fifty free TV channels offering news, sports, entertainment. So this was available for some other platforms. It was exclusive to Roku at the beginning, but now it's available on Google TV. So if you're looking for something where you can watch stuff for free, and that's what really people

want nowadays. People are sick of paying for their streaming services. Now they want these free services like Pluto TV and all these other ones. Free V from Amazon and Roku Channel available now on Google TV. So if you have one of those, you can download Roku Channel and watch some new stuff. All right, let's go to Let's go to Linda in San Clementy. Linda, you're on with Rich Hi.

Speaker 9

Can you hear me?

Speaker 1

I hear you great, what's up?

Speaker 9

Well, I'm sitting here charging my chestla, so I'm not at my computer.

Speaker 1

Oh nice, you have a basic.

Speaker 5

Question for you.

Speaker 9

I'm sure your screeno may have told you, but so I don't want to go on and on. But it's about my track pad. It's an Apple track pad, or I guess you'd call it mouse, okay, And I have a desktop computer Apple, and it has always done, for instance, email, I click on it and I move it over to some fork into I drag it to my folders. But all of a sudden it stopped being able to drag, and I have to click on it and then pull

it down to move too. It Also, if I go to take an email and forward it, and i'd like to take some of the email away, I used to be able to blue it out by holding it down and delete it, and now I have to take the cursor to one side, and each line out.

Speaker 5

I went up.

Speaker 16

I googled.

Speaker 9

I found out you know, what to do about the track pad is all fine in the settings as far as I'm sure, and I hard closed the computer a few times, however that remains okay.

Speaker 1

So it's just it's it's acting kind of funky like the not the way it used to act.

Speaker 9

Yeah, I just doesn't do the two things I generally is it for, which is moving you know, an email or something I purchased, But I'd like to put it over on the side of online quorterers, and now I have to do it. It's kind of like manually.

Speaker 1

I guess. Yeah, it's just it's just not working the way it used to work. So a couple of things. Uh, you start, You restarted your computer? Yes?

Speaker 13

What?

Speaker 1

Okay, so that's done. You did that. What about this? I'm assuming it's like an Apple track pad, right, it's like an Apple branded one. Yes, okay. Have you tried resetting the actual track pad?

Speaker 14

Well?

Speaker 9

I went up the settings and I looked at how it is set, but I don't know how to reset it. Is it in that I go to settings? Will it say reset your trackpad?

Speaker 1

There should be a physical button on the track pad. I don't have mine with me here, but there should be a physical button.

Speaker 9

Have you on that button that turns it on and off light?

Speaker 1

No?

Speaker 9

I have not done that.

Speaker 1

Okay, so what I would do is do that next. So press that for five seconds until it turns off, and then press it for five more seconds while you turn it on instead of just pressing it quick to turn it on, hold it, press it for five seconds to turn it on until the light starts flashing, and that will kind of like that'll kind of reset it.

So you may have to reconnect it to your computer after that situation and that that hopefully should bring it back to the factory settings and everything will be back to the way you remember it. If that doesn't work, I would also maybe go into the Bluetooth settings on your computer and delete the track pad and reconnect it and see if that helps. But those are those are the things that I would do to kind of like see if it can come back to life the way

that you wanted it. And you said you checked in your settings, because I would go in there and just make sure that nothing got changed because there are a considerable amount of settings when it comes to these track pads.

I know, it just seems like a simple point click, drag whatever, but there are a lot of things that these little track pads can do, and so you know, that's that's something that you might want to look into as well, especially the point and click, and you know, sometimes there's there's different little settings in there that may the gestures are you know, just that could have changed. I'm not saying they did, but I think that this just is a little bit needs a reconnection. Let's put it that way.

Speaker 11

Thank you.

Speaker 9

I will definitely try that. I love your program. I learn a lot because I'm not techy, but after listening to you, I feel like, I, you know, recharge my my techi brain.

Speaker 1

I love it. Well, you're you're recharging your tesla and your brain. How do you? How do you like the Tesla?

Speaker 7

I love my titts.

Speaker 5

I've had.

Speaker 1

This is my third your third test, so you were early on you? Why not? Wow? Okay, Well I love mine. I I think it's great. So except someone someone hit mine. If you listen to the show, you know I talked about someone hit and run and I had I didn't have my cameras turned on, so I didn't have the recording of that hit.

Speaker 9

Well, my first one was the ass and my son, being young, he ordered it for me with ludicrous. I never used that portion of the car.

Speaker 1

Oh you should have. You gotta try that.

Speaker 5

I tried it once.

Speaker 1

Yeah, that was the best. Tesla lent me a car one time, and I did the all I did was literally take every friend and family member I knew down a street and we just all, like, you know, shot back into the seat. Right.

Speaker 9

Oh yeah, I felt like I was a mission impossible movie for sure.

Speaker 1

Exactly. All Right, Linda, thanks so much and keep me posting on if you get this working again.

Speaker 9

Okay, thank you, thanks for taking my call.

Speaker 1

Thanks for calling. Appreciate it. All right. Uh man, there's a lot of a lot of issues this weekend. I think the heat is bringing out the issues in people. Let me, let me hold on, let me grab this. I mean, I want to talk about this. But since Linda was talking about her Tesla, you know, EV's in the sun, in the heat, and we're going through a heat wave, not only here in Los Angeles, but in a lot of different cities right now. You're ev it'll be okay in the heat, but the heat definitely taxes

the battery a little bit more. So, here's what you need to know. If you've got an electric car, you know this heat could affect your battery's health, especially over time. It could decrease the range. The reason is the chemicals in the battery. I don't want to get into the technical details. Of that, but basically they speed up and it can it can cause issues with the long term range of the battery. So if your car is in a hot garage for a long time, that can affect it.

Cold water or cold weather not so much, doesn't really it changes the range just temporarily but not permit. And of course many evs are in places like California, Texas and Florida where the temperatures are the highest. So battery tips according to La Times park in this shade. Don't fast charge unnecessarily, So if you don't need to fast charge, don't like charge overnight. Slowly keep your car plugged in when you're not using it, Like if you have it

in the garage, you can plug it in. That will let your car naturally keep the battery cool because it has systems in place to do that. And you can limit charging to eighty percent. So I know you get this car and you want it to go the full range, but I do believe I've been plugging mine in and charging it up to one hundred percent for a couple of years now, and I do think that has definitely taking the range down for sure. So eighty percent that's

where you want to be on a daily basis. Sure you can charge full if you're going on a road trip or something like that, but on a day to day basis commuting and all that is the magic number. Yeah, the heat definitely will have an issue, will have an effect on it. So just know that if you have an EV it'll be fine, but just know that it could potentially have some long term issues with your car.

All right, let's uh, let's take a break. Triple eight rich one on one eight eight eight seven four to two four to one zero one is the phone number to call. You can also email It's hello at richon tech dot tv. And if you haven't checked out the website, rich on tech dot tv brand new, cleaned up, ready to go. And I'll put the show notes for everything I mentioned here. So do I have time? I have time for one more? I have time for one more quick thing? I'm getting the look from Bobo that I

got I got like quick quickick. I'll just tell you two quick things that are happening inside Google Google Calendar. In Google Calendar, they have added a feature that lets you send a link to someone and you can find a mutual time to meet. So it's kind of like this app called calendar Calendly. How do you say that calendly c A L E N D L y calendly calendly dot com. A lot of people use this to

find a time that works for both people. Now they've built that directly into Gmail, so you can find that when you're composing an email, look for a new calendar icon and it will show you the times that you're free, or you can share a link to someone and both find a time that you can meet. So that's kind of cool. And then this is really neat. If you have a business that relies on paid appointments, you can

actually take paid appointment bookings right through Google Calendar. Now all you have to do is connect your Stripe, set a price, and create a booking page, and then customers can go to your little page and pay for the booking. So if you have some sort of consulting business or whatever you do where people pay for your time, you can now do that directly in Google Calendar. And Google Calendar says that they connect to Stripe, they don't process

the payments themselves. You have to deal with all that through Stripe. But you can enable this paid booking feature inside Google calendar. So if you want to get charged for your time or charge for your time, there you go. I'll put all this on the website rich on tech dot. You all right, now we're going to break. Welcome back to rich on Tech where we're talking technology. Let's go to Jerry in Rancho San Rancho Santa Margarita. Is that right?

Speaker 9

Yep?

Speaker 1

But I've got Rancho San Margarita on my notes here, so I was like, I don't know if it's San Margarita or Santa, but welcome to the show.

Speaker 7

Well, it is Rancho Santa like clause Margarita.

Speaker 1

Oh wow, so you got You got Santa Claus and Margarita all in the same name. That's a that's a fun place. What can I help you out?

Speaker 7

Well, it is Rancho Santa like clause Margarita.

Speaker 1

Oh wow, so you got You got Santa Claus and Margarita all in the same name. That's a that's a fun place. What can I help you with?

Speaker 7

Well, I'm a longtime follower. You and I have traded emails over the past years. My question, I've been a mac Apple user since.

Speaker 1

Day one and day one of what.

Speaker 7

Well nineteen ninety.

Speaker 1

Oh wow, okay, so day one, I.

Speaker 7

Don't want to show my I don't want to show my age. But I've since been on Mac computers and and of course they're iOS forever.

Speaker 1

Okay, Well, the question is Rich.

Speaker 7

I don't know if you've run across this, but I've got a external eight terabyte card drive that I use for time Machine and for backups on my MacBook and my desk stop and some reason I got this NTFS that popped up, and now the external drive says read only, and there are like a bunch of sites that want to charge for like I guess to fix it, to fix it, but then I sent the email to them, I said, what happens if I canceled the subscription? And

they said, well then it won't work. So I don't know if I'm going to have to just get a new external drive, move everything over to that one, and then reform at this one that says read only.

Speaker 1

Okay, well, what hold on? So what have you used this drive on your computer?

Speaker 12

Oh?

Speaker 7

Yeah, I mean it was my main backup for and I can't do it. Won't let me do time Machine, it says, they back up sales because it's read only.

Speaker 1

Now, okay, did you plug this into a different computer.

Speaker 7

No, it just I think this NTFS pop up came on and I thought maybe it was my error that I tried to get rid of it, and I think it installed this Microsoft NTFS that you know obviously is not compatible with the Yeah.

Speaker 1

Yeah, NTFS is is a format for the drive that the Mac does not like, and so that it's interesting that that it switched, though I'm trying to figure out what made it switch.

Speaker 7

I might have, you know, when I think back, and it's been I've been trying for like a couple of months to you know, go on different sites and do different searches to see how to fix it. And some people have suggested, well, the best thing to do is get another drive and you're going to have to reform at it and then it'll be fine. But this is a great Sea Day eight terabyte that I've had for a couple of years.

Speaker 1

Well okay, okay, Well so here's my so Number one, you could a couple of things you could do with this. First off, you could try to repair the permissions. So have you tried to do that in finder? Have you done that at all? Well?

Speaker 7

I think with the you know, and I thought about taking it to and I knew about fixing permissions. Yeah, but for some reason they won't.

Speaker 1

Yeah, probably won't do it because it's NTFS. Uh.

Speaker 7

Well, but I think when I talked to someone at Apple, when I went to a Genius bar the latest I guess iOS is on desktops or such that Mac os, they said they won't let you do like years ago used to be able to go in and click permissions.

Speaker 1

Well, you could still do it, it's on. It's in. If you do a command eye, you can see the permissions and just switch it, you know, to read and write. But if it's in NTFS is probably not going to let you do that. So a couple of things you can do here. If this is a drive that you want to keep but the information on it is you can get rid of it. You can just go into disc utility and format it and just make sure you format it as a drive for the mac which you

probably want to use the Mac os extended. You know.

Speaker 7

Yeah, I've got so many files, like three or four terabytes of stuff that I need that you need.

Speaker 1

Okay, all right, So in that case, I.

Speaker 7

Guess I have to get a new drive.

Speaker 1

I guess, well, I don't. I think you could try to repair this with you can try a program. The one that I use that I think you could may be able to do on here is is clean my Mac. That may do it. The other thing. The other thing is you might be able to go into disc utility and click first aid and see if that yeah, I won't do it.

Speaker 7

Okay, go the disutilities and I haven't you clean my map, but.

Speaker 1

I would you can see if that can do it. But if it's not, this is a tricky one because it is format in a different way. I would say, maybe, uh, you got to transfer this data if you can't get the Mac to read this without losing everything. All right, coming up next, we're gonna talk. We're gonna talk nothing phone on rich On Tech. Welcome back to rich On Tech. Rich Demiro here hanging out with you, talking technology man. So many great questions today, Thanks for calling in at

Triple eight. Rich one o one joining me now is a guest that I'm very excited to have because he is someone that I look forward to watching his reviews on YouTube and not just that, but all of his travels. Benson is a tech reviewer UH based in Los Angeles, but lives in Hong Kong, so or well, Ben, you can explain. Ben, You're now You're in Thailand, so you are you are all over my friends, but you do Ben's gadget reviews on YouTube and you also write for

the tech website XDA Developers. Welcome to the show.

Speaker 2

Thanks for having me on.

Speaker 1

So where do you actually live these days? Because I know you've been in LA for a while and then you're you know you're in Hong Kong, So where do you actually live nowadays?

Speaker 2

I'm actually living in La.

Speaker 16

I was in Hong Kong for the past eight nine years, and I moved back to LA about like six months ago.

Speaker 1

Okay, and now.

Speaker 16

Right now fine, just because I'm happen to be between work trips. I have to go to go to Beijing for work and there's going to be another work trip in Seoul, which I know you know about. Yeah, waiting for that.

Speaker 1

Okay, I'm actually going to be there so I will see you. I'm going cool, nice, I'm excited. It's a Samsung event, so I'm I'm looking. I've never been so to Korea. Okay, let's talk about the nothing phone. This is the nothing phone too. I talked about it a little bit earlier in the show. Without was a while ago, So let me see if I have any notes on this phone. But I this is a startup that it's formerly a couple of people from one plus went over

London based startup it's called Nothing. This is their second phone and it's the first time it's available in the US, and it's an Android device six point seven inch screen. What is your impression of this phone?

Speaker 16

I like it quite a lot because I like it it has a lot of personality, which you can't always say about about phones that aren't like instead a flagship level, like this is like a little bit below the flagship level. It's what I would call like an upper midrange phone, and I think that has a lot of personality considering it's in that segment.

Speaker 1

Yeah, that's what's interesting about it, is like it's it's a basic Android device, but to me, it's one of these devices that, like I've had a hard time putting it down because I really think that I called it the you know, almost like the iPhone of Android. Like it's just it's simple, the software is clean, the phone does what you need it to do. The battery last forever. The camera's pretty decent. I mean, I think they came up with a pretty good device here.

Speaker 16

Yeah, I think that's exactly what our call paid the CEO of Nothing. That's what he's aiming for to make a kind of stylish and minimalistic device that you know, kind of takes on a little bit. That's like Apple's m right, like stylish, minimal.

Speaker 1

What about the back of this phone? It's got this glyph interface. Do you think some people are saying it's basically these lights that you can program to, you know, so you put your phone face down, and if you get an important text or an important voicemail, it will light up just those glyphs instead of you know, ringing your whole phone or making you look at the notifications all the time. Do you think this is a gimmick or do you actually find some use out of this.

Speaker 16

I lean slightly towards the gimmick part, although I in my review I didn't call it that, But I'm slightly leaning in that direction, mostly because I feel like a lot of people would just they're completely okay looking at the front of the phone, because the whole point of the Cliff interface is you're still looking at your phone, you're just looking at the back instead of the front. And call pay gave this whole speech about how like he wants to keep people's screen time down to help

them more focus in the moment. And I guess some people that could be very useful for them, But for me, I find that all of them the likes looking very cool.

Speaker 2

I most of the times I just rather look at the front of the phone.

Speaker 1

I kind of agree with that, Like, I felt like it was odd to place my phone face down. As much as I understand the reasoning for that, I feel like we've all kind of gotten to this point where, yeah, some people are like super you know, they can't stop looking at their notifications, but there's also a helpfulness there, so you know, I think that's a maybe just a

personal preference for how you want to use it. What did you think about the software and the cameras, especially because I you know, when I first took a couple of pictures, I was like, Wow, this camera is actually like I just I just I'm so programmed to be disappointed by things and so I but when I started taking pictures, like this is actually pretty good.

Speaker 16

Yeah, considering it's a relatively, you know, you know, it's price range. There's actually some debate on whether or not this phone is it's priced properly on the internet right now, particularly coming from other regions like not the US. But for me, this this phone isn't expensive, and I think at this price range of camera is quite good. But I'm also not that surprised because it uses the same

image sensor. The main camera is a lot of one plus phones, and I believe nothing like the software team right now, it's like sixty five percent of it. It's former one plus engineer, so Calpa has poshed a lot as former colleagues to jump over and one plus make pretty good phone. So I think that the camera is about what I was expecting, and that's what software.

Speaker 2

I like it a lot.

Speaker 16

It's very clean, as fast as minimal. So one of the cool things about the software, or maybe gimmicky things. It's all monochrome, at least when you first boot up the phone. You can change it back to color later, but it's monochrome and the app icons don't have titles on it, so at first I was a little bit thrown off. I had a hard time identifying which apps I want to tap on. But after a day, I actually have grown to like it, and I kind of like how I really like the home screen, how it looks.

Speaker 2

Sometimes I just found myself looking at it.

Speaker 1

Yeah, So it's a little odd because their whole mo is to get you to use the phone less. So they have the monochromatic mode, they have the icons that are sort of black and white and no labels, and so it makes you kind of much more thoughtful in how you use your phone. I don't know, I can't get used to that. I tried it. I just couldn't get used to it, and it just was one of those things where I had to switch back. But the okay, let's talk about some of the downsides of this phone.

So number one, there's no optical zoom to speak of, so it's you know, it's more like an iPhone I guess, you know, fourteen, it's not like a pro device. There's no e sim. I thought that the screen was kind of tough to see in bright light, and maybe that's just you know, I was at the beach kind of thing, like it was really tough to see, like in direct sunlight. And then of course the water resistance is pretty low for a phone in twenty twenty three. Are those kind of the downsides that you saw?

Speaker 2

Yeah, I agree.

Speaker 16

And the lack of a zoom lens in particular, it's disappointing to me because I really like using a zoom lens on all my smartphones, and I found the ULTRAI camera to be quite underwhelming in lowla conditions. During the day is fine, but at night, the Ultra camera photos are very very soft.

Speaker 1

M hmm. Interesting. Uh, I you know, I it's funny because I thought that the the odd thing was that even in like pretty brightly lit situations, I was still getting like a police hold still for like a couple of seconds to take a picture, which I thought was kind of odd because like this, you know, shouldn't shouldn't really be happening, Like it's it's pretty bright. But overall, I mean, would you recommend this device to people?

Speaker 2

I would.

Speaker 16

Certain type of users, I think. The lack of I think nothing in the US. The only selling directly to themselves, right, it's not through a carrier. Yeah, so that might that might be a tough sell in the US because a lot of American consumers just to get the phones through a carrier. So they can get subsidies and discounts and all that. So even though I like the phone, and I think if you're like an enjoy entusiast, because if you're an enjoy dou sy as like a phone geek,

I definitely would recommend a phone. But like the average person, like if like my cousin or my mom passed me, they would still be it would still be the safer bed to get an iPhone or get a Samsung Galaxy because you can get it to a carrier, so you can get it at a cheaper price, and those phones probably still have a little bit more proven track record of getting software updates down the line.

Speaker 1

And this is a It starts at five hundred and ninety nine dollars for a one hundred and twenty eight gigabyte model. It's available starting July seventeenth directly from the company, and it works on AT and T and T Mobile here in the US. Now there are Verizon antennas inside, but Verizon is really picky about letting certain devices on its network that are not verified whatever that means, and so you may be able to activate this on Verizon, but after a couple of days they will shut you down,

so I wouldn't even bother. But I will say Ben that I really overall think that they did a really nice job with this device. I think that there's like a couple of little things where I'm like, ah, it's just maybe not the best device in the world, and maybe if the price is cheaper, I would feel a little bit differently, But I still think it's a pretty

nice little second going from nothing. What since I have you and you test all these phones, what are sort of your top three devices that you recommend to people these days looking for Android or iOS? I guess so this question.

Speaker 16

Is always tricky for me to answer because I basically have to look at it from two different scenes. There's like the American phone scene, which is relatively limited compared to what Asia and Europe gets because there are a lot of Chinese brands that don't sell in the US at all, but they are major players in Asia and Europe and they make very good phones. So I was looking at the US scene, my top three phones would have to be I still like the Google Pixel seven

prol the best. I think the camera is still my favorite of the bunch of all the phones in the US. Anyway, the second would be the glass z Phone four because I am fully on board the foldable phone BANDWRAG and I like having a larger screen that fits into my pocket. And then number three would probably be the iPhone fourteen Pro Max.

Speaker 2

In the US.

Speaker 16

And then if you care to know about my non US, there's like two you know, brands that Americans have never heard of, so maybe they're not relevant.

Speaker 1

Give me give me your top non US because I know this is why you travel a lot, so I mean, you see these things in other countries that we don't have access to here.

Speaker 16

So my overall number one phone would probably be the shaw Me thirteen Ultra. Shaw Mei is one of the biggest tech companies in China, and the thirteen Ultra phone has in my opinion, the best overall cameras were now even better than the Pixel seven pros. This main camera has a one inch image sensor from Sony. It's the same sensor used in like point and shoot Sony camera, so it's it's like almost like a real camera.

Speaker 1

Wow. And are you excited? Do you think that the Samsung folds that are coming out in a couple of weeks do you think they're gonna be something to rival what we have right now.

Speaker 16

I think they're going to from the leagues i've seen, they are going to be improvements, but maybe not as big as a lot of people have hoped for. The Full five in particular look almost identical to the Full four, but the Flip five gets a big upgrade because outside screens are gonna be much bigger.

Speaker 2

So that will be fun.

Speaker 1

That's the trend that we're seeing with those flippables. You got the flippable and the foldable, Ben Sin, We're gonna leave it there. Thanks so much for joining me today. I know it's early in Thailand. Thank you. I will see you in a couple of weeks in Korea, and I've got all the information on the website. If you want to follow Ben on Twitter, it's Ben c Sin s I N and check out his review on XDA developers of the Nothing Phone two. Ben, thanks for joining

me today. Thanks for having me on all right, appreciate it all right. Coming up next it is the feedback segment. We're going to close out the show with everything you had to say this week. You're listening to rich on Tech. Welcome back to rich on Tech. Rich DeMuro here hanging out with you closing out the show with the feedbag segment. Yeah, I said feedbag. It's your feedback, but I called it the feedbag one time, and I guess that stuck. Got

an email from Daniel. He said, hey, Rich, you had a caller on that said they couldn't get an NTFS drive to work on their Mac. I only use NTFS drives because I can share between my MAX and PCs. All you have to do is buy a program called NTFS for Mac from Paragon Software. It's not expensive and I think you get a thirty day free trial. There you go. I've used it for yours. Thank you, Daniel and Barry. Now you have it. Check it out. Paragon Software NTFS for Mac and says it's fully compatible with

Apple Silicon M one and M two. So this is why I love this show. Listeners contribute to the show. It's amazing, all right. Message from Data, Hey Rich, I have an Apple iMac that's from twenty thirteen. It's no longer getting security updates. I just purchased a new Mac Mini. How can I transfer my data from my old Mac to the new one. I've not done a backup. I really don't have many files on it. Can I just put my files on a flask drive and upload to the new computer, or is there a way to transfer

some other way? Thanks? Yeah, you know what I would say. If you don't have a lot of files, just put them on a flask drive and move them over. You can do a time machine backup and restore it that way. It'll ask you during setup if you have an old Mac that you want to move from personally, because this computer's so old. I would just take what you need, put it on the flask drive, set up the computer fresh, the new Macmini, and then just drag over the files

that you have in the flash drive. I think that's going to be the easiest way to do it. Data. That way, you get a nice, clean new computer with your files on there. Alexander says, thoughts on your opening monologue accessibility features. Forgive my cynicism, but you really think that's the only reason. I mean, there's probably some other benefits,

but that will come in later. To play right. Alexander is referring to the voice situation on the new iOS seventeen where you can have it say anything you want. And this is my it's called personal voice. This is what it sounds like, what's going on?

Speaker 3

I'm Rich Demurou and this is riched on Tech, the show where I talk about the text off I think you should know about and answer your question.

Speaker 1

So that's what it sounds like. Does it sound just like me? I don't know. I mean I could have to say anything I want, but I don't think Apple's being nefarious. They said. The reason for this is specifically they called out als. So if you have that condition and you lose your voice over time because of that, this is a way to have your computer speak in your voice when you're talking to people versus a computerized voice.

But yes, they're will As long as there's AI, computers and technology, there will always be nefarious reasons for people using everything. Right, let's see James says, Hey, Rich, any suggestions what can I do with this lost air tag I left behind when I visited Sedona in February. I'm able to activate lost mode, but no one contacted me, and now somehow it's moved to Flagstaff. Yeah, James, that's a lost cause. Just delete it from your system and

that's I hope it wasn't attached. And did you just lose the air or did you lose what was attached to it, because usually the AirTags are connected to something, but it says you just lost an AirTag. So number one thing to do when you lose an AirTag enable the lost mode and if you find an air tag, use your phone, make sure the NFC is on and tap the top of the AirTag to the top of your phone and it should give you the information. I'll bring up a website with a person's information. Let's see here.

Laura says, Hey, Rich, I purchased the ring dash cam in January after you did a segment on it. It was supposed to be delivered by today. Now the delivery date pushed to March twentieth, twenty twenty four. Why is there such a delay? Don't know. Maybe either they're recalling this cam or there's just I think Amazon delivery days change a lot, so hopefully March twenty twenty four. Wow, I think that's a fluke. Hopefully maybe a lot of people ordered them during Prime Day and they just pushed it,

but hopefully you'll get it earlier. Keep me posted hosted. Uh, let's see, Leo says Leo. Leo says, I don't know if you're boomerang Email yourself is still working, but mine's not. It appears to be gone from both the Apple and Android store. Even if you can install it, it does not work. This leaves me with email myself. Yes, I switched to email myself as well, Leo, and I don't like it as much because I don't like the icon, but it does the trick. And finally, David says, is

there a way to convert American airlines miles into gift cards? Google? Bard says to create an account at points dot com, but I can't find a way. If you have an idea, I don't think you can do it. David. I think points dot com is now doing sort of white label stuff. They're not doing their own. They used to exchange points in their own way, but apparently they don't do that anymore. Thanks so much for listening to this episode of the show.

Check out the notes at richontech dot tv. Next week, I'm going to tell you about new AI enforcement technology cities are using to help buses write tickets to cars blocking their lanes. My name is rich DeMuro. Thanks so much for listening. There are so many ways to spend your time. I do appreciate you spending it right here with me. I'll talk to you real soon.

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