Ian and Aaron discuss Aaron's TUI app, what it's like being a founder over 40, "the drones", and so much more.
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00:00 Founders Over Forty
10:51 It's Gonna Be Bad
15:27 Watch Guy
22:44 TUI Is A Silly Word
38:29 Try Hard Empire Update
59:38 Ian Found A Budgeting App!
01:08:35 Advertising Platform
01:14:01 What Time Is It?
01:20:25 The Drones
Aaron
00:00:00 – 00:00:02
Hello?
Good morning, sir.
How are we doing?
Monday.
Ready to hit it hard this week.
Oh, wow.
That was
Aaron
00:00:07 – 00:00:17
a long pause.
I don't know if that'll make it to post.
I didn't know if it's it's Monday, ready to hit it hard, or it's Monday, and I'm ready to give up.
I'm glad I'm glad we're ready to hit it hard.
Ready to hit it hard.
Got no time to give up.
Got stuff to do.
All
Aaron
00:00:21 – 00:00:24
the work.
Even being over 40, Ian?
I know.
Could you believe it?
Aaron
00:00:26 – 00:00:30
Can you believe this?
Founders over 40.
Should we start there?
Aaron
00:00:31 – 00:00:32
Let's do it.
It?
I didn't read it.
No.
I I have no chance this weekend was very busy.
So Yeah.
You don't need to read something you already know about, I guess.
No.
I'm here.
You can ask me questions about it, I guess.
I don't know.
Well, give me the give me the two sentence.
Aaron
00:00:47 – 00:00:56
you I'll give you the two sentence.
I kind of read it.
Justin Jackson wrote something about founders over 40, highlighted a bunch of people.
But
it went viral or something.
Aaron
00:00:58 – 00:01:09
I know.
It did.
It made it to Hacker News.
Mentioned a couple friends of the show.
I think Brian Castle, Jordan Goll, Paul Jarvis, who just, you know, retired from Fathom.
Aaron
00:01:09 – 00:01:34
Right.
And basically was just talking about how seems like everything's changing for founders over 40.
And I think a big crux of his argument was, like, he doesn't think that founders over 40 have the same, quote, unquote, raw horsepower that they used to, and they start optimizing for different things.
Right.
So I don't know.
Aaron
00:01:34 – 00:01:40
So here's the thing.
Here's the thing.
I'm not buying it.
I'm really not.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:01:41 – 00:01:56
Here's what I will here's what I will say.
I think, yes, founders over 40 probably do optimize for different things.
That just even even a a spry 35, I'm optimizing for different things than when I was 25.
Aaron
00:01:57 – 00:02:09
So I was I was at a friend's birthday party this weekend, and where I was talking to a younger guy and he was like, so what are like he was like, what are you gonna do with your job?
What are you optimizing for?
Aaron
00:02:09 – 00:02:21
like, well, what are you optimizing for?
And he said, I wanna love my job.
And I said, I wanna make money.
I was like, that's what I'm optimizing for.
So I totally get that.
Aaron
00:02:22 – 00:02:36
But I don't know.
It felt a little, it felt a little downer.
It felt a little desal, you know?
It felt a little like once you hit the wall, it's game over.
There's no more there's no more hope for you, old man.
Aaron
00:02:37 – 00:02:46
don't know.
I just, you know, that is, that goes against what I like to believe.
I don't I don't like it.
So with that, very lossy summary of
Aaron
00:02:46 – 00:02:49
Justin's article, give me give me your over 40 take.
I got yeah.
I have a few counterpoints for you here.
I don't think all hope's lost for you.
Aaron
00:02:54 – 00:02:59
First of all, I know first of all, I know all hope is not lost for me.
It's the people that I'm worried about.
The people giving up.
I'm not going
Aaron
00:03:01 – 00:03:03
gentle into that good night.
Well, I think there's an interesting stat you know, this is one of these stats that's around.
I think it's fairly accurate, which is the the sort of average age of someone starting a business.
Mhmm.
This is not necessarily in tech.
Right?
What text file different, but in general, any business, it's like 49 or something like that.
Mhmm.
So like people start businesses, you know, the average age of someone starting a business, it might be your corner store.
It might be a auto shop.
It might whatever.
It's, like, 49, 40 seven, something like that.
So already, that's a little counterpoint.
Right?
Because it's, like, people are starting these businesses where supposedly in the over the hill Right.
If we're thinking of, like, over forty years over the hill in terms of Mhmm.
Aaron
00:03:42 – 00:03:43
One foot in the grave.
Yeah.
Right.
I think where he's coming from, again, having, just seen, like, the top Having not read an article where he's coming from is.
I did see the people he talked to and you just reiterate them.
And like, so just from that vibe and himself and like myself and all those people on the list are people who've been doing it for a very long time already.
Yes.
So we've all been doing it twenty years or fifteen years or whatever.
And so that is a little bit different because not just that you're over 40, it's that you're over 40 and you've been doing this for twenty years.
Aaron
00:04:17 – 00:04:19
Twenty years.
Yeah.
Your customers have been on your ass three hundred sixty five days a year.
Right?
Employees, whatever.
Financial pressure, the market, like, all this stuff, you know, meaning your business market, not the stock market.
So, like, you've been amped up at this level Right.
Aaron
00:04:36 – 00:04:38
already.
Glass for twenty years.
And now you're 45 or you're 48, you're 43, and you're like, whew, that's better run.
You know?
So I think that's a little different than, like, even where you're coming from, let's say, where you're kinda just starting your pure founder.
Like, you've been poking around on starting things, but you haven't been out on your own totally out there.
Right?
It's just year one.
Right?
So I think that's a little different right there.
But, yeah, I mean, at the end of the day, I do think when your guys, you get a little bit older, there is, like, a little less energy generally.
There are, like, different demands on your time.
So I think it's all true.
And, like, even the kids, like, the kids when they're little, man, it's like, they're super hard in the some ways, but then there's, like, you put them somewhere and they stay there.
And that is awesome.
You know?
And then, like, they get to where that's not true.
Or they're giving you attitude.
Like, my daughter this weekend had, like, a balanced little attitude thing going on.
Right.
Cause she's 12 almost and all this stuff.
So you're dealing with these other humans on a human level, like day in, day out.
It's like, these are other basically adults that I'm having to interact with all the time and have adult conversations with.
And like, you just wanna sit down and play a video game or play chess, but no, like you've got, and then they wanna do stuff.
Right.
And that stuff isn't like, we'll sit on the floor and play for twenty minutes.
It's go skiing, ride a horse, do a, go on a trip.
Like it's big stuff that takes energy from you.
Right?
Like, real energy, not just like, yeah.
I can I can fake my way through this by bopping the little man around for, you know, half an hour, and we're playing, and that's fun?
Or build a couch for it or, like, something cool.
So yeah.
So I do think there are differences there, and there is something to all that.
But I do think it's amalgamation also of, like, yeah, people who've already been at it a long time, and they're already burned out the way people get burned out on regular golf.
And so that's a factor too.
Aaron
00:06:28 – 00:06:51
And I think there's another it always seems like there's another level to it where it's I feel like this somewhat dovetails into the calm company discussions Mhmm.
Where it's like, oh, you should just run a really calm company and just, like, optimize for lifestyle.
And I tend to be the people you know where I'm going with this.
It tends to be the people that have made it that that a spouse
Aaron
00:06:52 – 00:07:11
It's like, hey, man, my company's making several million dollars a year, and I've decided it is better to not work very hard.
And you're like, I bet.
That sounds awesome.
I'm happy for you.
And so that it it had that same, it had that same tint to me of, like, hey.
Aaron
00:07:11 – 00:07:15
You don't don't worry about it.
Once you made it, you made it.
I'm like, I haven't made it yet, man.
Yeah.
I'm not a calm company believer, really.
I don't I don't really get it.
I don't think I think there's, like, so few examples of the calm company.
Like, from a start to finish Calm company.
It's like there's, like, literally, you could count them on one hand.
So to me, it's not Yes.
Like, a actual path to success.
It's like a total exception to the rule.
Mhmm.
But, yeah, I mean, there are, it's all the whole continuum.
Like I've never been all the way to the, like, well, that's not really true.
I sort of have been to the extreme, not, not in the maybe sense of like raising money and having a huge company that end of the extreme.
But like in terms of hours, I've definitely been the extreme.
And I feel like that's usually what people have.
Right?
Like, you don't have the money.
You have the hours.
And so Right.
That's what people put in is the hours.
There's not, like, really a great substitute, I don't think, generally speaking.
So yeah.
Yeah.
Com company advice, very difficult.
It is almost always from people who have made a lot of money already, and they're like, you know what?
I dialed it back, and it's all good.
Aaron
00:08:18 – 00:08:27
And I went and found myself, and I work, you know, twenty hours a week.
And the rest of the time, I spend, you know, whatever, doing yoga or something.
And I found out it's better this way.
Aaron
00:08:28 – 00:08:30
You're like, nobody is surprised by that.
Aaron
00:08:31 – 00:08:32
it's better.
I got a whole team, and they're taking care of everything.
And, like Yeah.
There's nothing to worry about, which is true.
I mean, like, yeah, like, even my company, it's like, even if just a handful of employees makes a huge difference and lets you be much calmer than when you were by yourself or with just one employee or things like that.
So those all make a huge difference.
But yeah, it's not really actionable advice.
I feel like for most people, because it's like, well, this works.
It's like, it's like, I hate more than anything.
The four hour week guy, like that whole thing is such a load of crap.
And it's just like, it's, obviously, the most annoying is how he's made, you know, who knows, a hundred million dollars on this Oh, easily.
Gimmick.
Easily.
Work at four hours a week.
Well, maybe if your job is to sell people a four hour a week booking, you could do it.
Maybe.
Aaron
00:09:19 – 00:09:22
Rising no one.
I love Tim Ferris.
You hate Tim Ferris.
Right.
That's totally on brand.
Aaron
00:09:23 – 00:09:25
I think it's awesome.
I think
he's great.
Ferris, though.
He's the exact antithesis of exactly what he's what you're talking about here.
He's the guy who's like, just work two hours a week.
If you have a virtual assistant, that's all you need, and you'll be rich instantly.
Aaron
00:09:38 – 00:09:44
That was the shtick.
I don't think so I read the book when I was when I was much younger.
Aaron
00:09:44 – 00:09:53
oh, yeah.
This is awesome.
This is cool.
I'm totally gonna work four hours a week.
I don't know that it was ever really besides the title, which is, of course, provocative.
Aaron
00:09:53 – 00:10:19
I don't know if it was ever really the plan for anyone, especially him, to work four hours a week.
It was all about, like, hacking things so you could do more with less, which, of course, I'm super on board with.
That dude's probably worked sixty hours a week his entire life, you know, preaching this four hour work week thing.
But, yeah, I I like him a lot.
I've stopped listening to his podcast, you know, for the past several years because it got a little I don't know.
Aaron
00:10:19 – 00:10:29
It just got a little too woo woo, a little too naval gaze, a little too Ayahuasca retreats, and I'm like, it doesn't do anything for me.
Yeah.
But, yeah, I think it's great.
I I love it.
Aaron
00:10:31 – 00:10:47
This, so so I I Justin's article is not what I'm about to say.
It's not this thing, but it has the it is, directionally in the same way as this thing that I'm about to say.
But I just wanna be clear.
Justin's article was not this bad.
Aaron
00:10:47 – 00:11:01
This is negative.
This is not about this is not about you, Justin.
But there seems to be a whole, there seems to be a whole, like, cultural vibe of when you're about to do something, everyone tells you how bad it's gonna be.
Right.
It's like, oh.
Aaron
00:11:01 – 00:11:08
you know, we're getting we're getting married the next year.
Oh, first year of marriage.
It's impossibly hard.
Just hang on for dear life.
Aaron
00:11:09 – 00:11:14
you getting married?
Oh, man.
We're having kids.
Well, kiss your life goodbye.
You're about to have kids.
Aaron
00:11:14 – 00:11:27
And I'm like, can we just, like, can we just talk about how those things are also good?
Like, of course, having kids is hard.
You don't need to tell me it's gonna be hard.
Tell me I'm gonna make it.
Tell me it's gonna be awesome.
Aaron
00:11:27 – 00:11:33
Tell me it's gonna be fun.
But this whole, oh, we're gonna have a kid, and everybody's like, oh, sorry.
See you never.
Aaron
00:11:34 – 00:11:36
are you doing, guys?
This is
Boy, I feel attacked here because I'm the guy who tells you it's bad in a couple years.
Aaron
00:11:40 – 00:11:45
You you are the guy that that tells me everything everything on the way is bad.
Yeah.
That is actually true.
Oh, that's true.
That's good too.
That was a good point, though.
There's so much good stuff, but it's like There is
Aaron
00:11:50 – 00:11:51
so much good stuff.
Yeah.
You end up talking about these things in the context of, you know, your time or, like, obviously, things change and get harder in some ways, but then the trade off is, like, yes.
Like, like, what we were just talking about.
You have to interact with this other person who's a real human and basically an adult, and that can be incredibly difficult as dealing with adults is.
But on the flip side, it's like, oh, wow.
Like, my kid's an adult, and they're cool, and they're a good person, and they have fun, and we have fun together.
And, like, you can have a conversation that's interesting.
My daughter just taught me something the other day about the history of numbers, blah blah blah.
So you can learn stuff from them.
Obviously, you can't learn anything from your little two year old or one year old or baby.
Like, you learn stuff about yourself, but you don't really learn from them.
Boy, can't I.
They're not they're not teaching you things directly.
So, yeah, there's, like, all the all the upside there.
Yeah.
That's true.
I think our society is very, you know, pessimistic, inherently.
Aaron
00:12:40 – 00:12:43
Very pessimistic.
Very pessimistic.
Don't like that one bit.
No.
No.
I'm with you on that.
How do you work around that?
How do you get around that?
What's your strategies?
You have strategies to put those things to not let those things get you down?
Aaron
00:12:55 – 00:12:59
It's not really.
I mean, those things get me down if I'm being honest.
Aaron
00:13:00 – 00:13:10
Yeah.
Giant mute list, logging off.
I took Twitter off my phone, Twitter and Blue Sky off my phone, which has been it's been it's been weird, but it's been very nice.
Aaron
00:13:11 – 00:13:23
I'll, like, you know, get up from my desk to walk to the bathroom, which is, like, 12 steps.
I'm like, what am I gonna do on the way?
I guess just gonna walk there like an idiot.
So it's very strange.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:13:23 – 00:13:37
I don't know.
I do have, you know, I have a lot of good close friends that are encouraging and optimistic as well.
It does seem like there's just a lot of drive by commentary, from people that you don't really know.
You know?
Aaron
00:13:39 – 00:14:05
So, yeah, I don't know.
Maybe try to I think I've tried recently, like, in the past year or so to, like, evaluate the source of the comments more.
Like, if somebody is telling me something and turns out I don't want their life at all or I don't respect their opinions on other things at all.
Right.
And it's like, oh, I I don't really, like, I don't really need to listen to that comment.
Aaron
00:14:06 – 00:14:23
if I if I actually think Yeah.
You're wrong about almost everything and then you tell me something, I'm like, wait.
Why am I letting that affect me?
I don't respect your opinion.
So I've tried to, like, validate the source of things more rather than just let any, you know, little piece of snark into my life, and that's been helpful.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so much advice is, like, it's so depend I mean, I was just the in business, the clearest cut example.
It's like people who are successful.
Like, what got them there is so rarely the thing that could get you there.
Just surely, like, the time is different.
The timeline's different.
Now is not what it was five years ago.
Like, all these things, you know, obviously, with example, I always talk about is DHH, right?
Like he's always like, just do the stuff we did.
Even the stuff they did first of all is not twenty years ago and completely insane as like a path, like just become famous.
And then like, you can leverage that.
And it's like, no, it's probably not gonna work.
Even people become famous sometimes have a hard time leveraging it, like, the whole thing.
So, yeah, you have to, like, always find it's like you could take these parts of these bits of advice, but then you can't always utilize the whole thing anyway even if it's from a trusted source.
Aaron
00:15:10 – 00:15:22
You do have to you do have to run it through, like, a processing function.
Yeah.
Like a like a debias function or, like, a rebias.
Like, first, you have to debias from them and then rebias for your situation
Aaron
00:15:23 – 00:15:24
and see if anything's left over.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, yeah, I did try I actually last week went to this little phase of, like so I go on these long walks generally.
And in winter now, I'm like, I got this pack on, and I got the straps, and it's like, I'd know the phone, like, I'm holding the phone because, like, I got nowhere to put it.
Like, the straps are across where my pockets are and whatever.
And I was like, you know, I just wanted the phone.
I'm tired of holding the phone.
Like, forget even the stuff on the phone.
Like, I'm tired of holding the phone.
I'm tired of it weighing down my pants.
Like, I'm just tired of that, like, the physical object of the phone.
Right?
So I was like, let me try to just go to be the just watch guy.
And I don't think I could, like, totally like, I don't think I could never have a phone.
Like, I there's just times you need a phone.
Aaron
00:16:06 – 00:16:06
Fuck.
But, man, the watch is just it's just not there yet to actually replace the phone.
Like, it doesn't this isn't even a big deal for me, but, like, on traveling, one one thing is, like, doesn't have Uber.
Okay?
So you can't have, like, Uber, which is would be nice.
Okay.
Bring my phone traveling.
Fuck.
But even just other things, like, the way you sync audio books and stuff is wacky.
Like the way you sync things is wacky.
It's like it's got 64 gigs of memory, but I can't just say, like, there's not just like, hey, sync this.
Like in Audible, there's no button that says sync this.
You have to, like, go in and, like, pick it on the watch or something, and then it's, like, stream and download.
Well, is it downloading or is it streaming?
Aaron
00:16:39 – 00:16:40
How do
I know when it's done?
Does it even tell you it's done?
Like so there's all these little weird things.
I'm like, I can't even believe it's been ten years, and, like, there's just a lot of oddities.
And they portray it as something, like, it's cellular.
Like, you don't really necessarily need your phone all the time, but you really do.
There was, like, every app that's, like, on the critical end had all these weird things.
Slack doesn't have an app, which
Aaron
00:17:00 – 00:17:03
If you're slacking on your watch, you've already lost.
I don't wanna know the way
on my watch, but there are times where I wanna be notified if somebody mentions me.
So then I could, like, go to my laptop or whatever.
Aaron
00:17:10 – 00:17:11
Like Mhmm.
Like, I'm playing poker.
I take a day off playing poker, but some there's some critical issue.
I would love to get a notification.
That's like, oh, like somebody asked you something important.
I can always go up to the room, go to my laptop, handle the situation, whatever.
Aaron
00:17:23 – 00:17:26
That that's not calm, Ian.
You gotta be more calm.
Exactly.
Definitely not calm.
But the phone it's like the phone's better than that.
Right?
Like, the phone, I just I just sit there and answer it on the phone.
Right?
Like, so it's the same thing except that 99% of the time, I don't need to answer anything, and so it's fine.
So I wouldn't need my phone.
Aaron
00:17:40 – 00:17:47
Here here's my here's my $80.20 on that.
Just be watch guy only for walks.
I mean, so you don't need slack.
You don't need to answer.
You don't
need any of that.
You can you can
Aaron
00:17:49 – 00:17:51
bear the burden of syncing the audiobooks.
But
I could absolutely do that.
Aaron
00:17:52 – 00:18:01
To be watch guy only in in real life, I think you have to you have to have a lot more money.
You gotta have, like, somebody that follows you around.
Did you ever see that video of Trump?
A watch guy with an assistant.
Aaron
00:18:04 – 00:18:05
With an assistant.
Yeah.
He holds my watch.
Round here.
He holds my watch.
Exactly.
And that's what he does.
Aaron
00:18:09 – 00:18:18
Yeah.
What's my heart what what's my heart rate?
So did you see that video of Trump dictating his tweets?
He was, like, watching the Kamala speech.
This was a few months ago.
Aaron
00:18:18 – 00:18:25
Yeah.
And he was, like, watching TV, drinking a Diet Coke, and there's, you know, some some person sitting
Aaron
00:18:26 – 00:18:39
a laptop open with, like, Google Docs or Microsoft Word open to fonts, like, 200 font.
And he's like he says something insane, of course.
Like Okay.
What, you know, what is she saying?
She doesn't even know what she's saying.
Aaron
00:18:39 – 00:18:56
And the person next to him is writing, what is Kamala saying?
She doesn't even know what she's saying.
It's like this you know, the tweet takes up a full scroll of the page, and he looks over and he says, yep.
That's good.
And she'll take it and copy and paste it and go over to whatever, you know, truth social or whatever and tweet it out and all caps
Aaron
00:18:57 – 00:18:58
Yeah.
But
it's a vision.
Technology law.
Aaron
00:19:00 – 00:19:04
Vision.
I that was that was that was a vision for me of Yeah.
But you wouldn't wanna do it because you don't know how.
There's a huge difference between
Aaron
00:19:08 – 00:19:09
No.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:19:10 – 00:19:11
Outcome is the same.
And somebody does it for me out of convenience.
Yes.
Aaron
00:19:14 – 00:19:15
Outcome is the same where I
I would love a flunky.
Of course.
Who would
Aaron
00:19:17 – 00:19:28
love a flunky?
Am handed I'm handed pieces of paper that are emails, and I write on them with a Sharpie and hand it back.
I I dictate my tweets.
And, also, I'm president.
That is great.
I could do that.
I could absolutely do that.
I wanna know.
Do nothing job.
Aaron
00:19:32 – 00:19:34
Jennifer won't let me be president.
Aaron
00:19:35 – 00:19:39
No.
She thinks that she she claims that the wife always gets kidnapped.
Aaron
00:19:41 – 00:19:43
And I said, that only happens in movies.
I don't think it's everywhere in history.
Happened.
Never has it happened.
The wife is fine.
Aaron
00:19:48 – 00:19:49
The wife is always fine.
Melania doesn't even live with Trump.
Like, you she could Jennifer could just stay in Texas.
Aaron
00:19:53 – 00:20:02
She could yes.
She could be a part time first lady.
I know.
Yeah.
Now that I'm 35, the only thing that's holding me back from being president is Jennifer won't let me do it.
Damn.
That's true.
You are legit.
We could've had president Francis this year.
You could've solved all these problems.
You could've brought the nation together.
Yep.
You kinda let us down here, buddy.
I'm not gonna lie.
I know.
Let us down.
You could've brought us together.
You're from a big electoral
Aaron
00:20:16 – 00:20:18
college state.
I know.
Man, I would totally vote for you.
Aaron
00:20:21 – 00:20:22
See?
That's what I'm saying.
Aaron
00:20:24 – 00:20:24
I know.
I'm the pebble that starts the landslide.
Aaron
00:20:27 – 00:20:33
So between you and Jennifer, I'm down to zero votes.
So we need to get we need to get some more people to pile in on my side.
I can talk to Jennifer.
I know just what to say to her.
Don't even worry about that.
We'll we'll get it all approved.
It's gonna be fine.
Aaron
00:20:39 – 00:20:43
39.
When I'm 39, I'll be president.
God.
Can you imagine?
I love this idea.
The this is ready for a young president.
Like,
Aaron
00:20:47 – 00:20:49
that's right.
That much is true.
Right?
Is there anything more true than that?
True.
Aaron
00:20:51 – 00:20:51
Come on.
And I think the country obviously, like, hates experience and all that stuff.
So you Whoops.
What's the
Aaron
00:20:57 – 00:21:02
off the rails.
We're getting off the rails.
Let's go back to being young.
Let's go back to being young.
You don't have experience in government?
That's perfect.
Aaron
00:21:05 – 00:21:08
That is true.
Yeah.
So I'm very smart, boy.
Great fit.
Well, you're very smart, but you haven't run a state or been a senator, which is great.
Yeah.
So now you're you're in tech.
I love this.
See?
We're gonna be a totally nonpolitical podcast where one of the hosts is running for president.
Aaron
00:21:21 – 00:21:22
Becomes president.
And we never talk about any issues on here.
We don't talk about any any politics.
We Oh, man.
On the on the sideline, you're running for president.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:21:32 – 00:21:37
Oh, man.
Well, that's that would be one of our best bets ever.
Truly.
A good bet.
That would be a good bet.
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Alright.
Can you tell me what the hell's up at the terminal?
What does it turn?
Can you tell me
Aaron
00:22:49 – 00:22:51
what the hell's up with?
What the hell's up with?
Like, what's the problem?
I why is the problem a word?
I don't even like this Tui word.
Isn't Tui a bad word?
It's not a good term.
Aaron
00:22:59 – 00:23:00
Tui is a silly word.
I agree.
It's a silly word.
Aaron
00:23:02 – 00:23:04
It's silly.
But so is gooey, to be fair.
I know what gooey's been around forever, and Tui, they just Tui's
Aaron
00:23:06 – 00:23:07
been around for a long time.
Ago.
No.
The the concept of TUI has been around for longer.
The word TUI has not been around longer.
Okay.
Aaron
00:23:13 – 00:23:19
So the the history the etymology aside, what's the problem with TUI's?
I mean, I just think everybody's trying to shove everything in there.
Aaron
00:23:21 – 00:23:26
What is everyone trying to shove in there?
So I'm gonna I'm gonna dig in here.
What is I don't know.
Is
Why do I wanna do stuff in the terminal?
I don't wanna do anything in
Aaron
00:23:28 – 00:23:29
the terminal.
Have to.
Exactly.
And I wish I could do less.
Aaron
00:23:33 – 00:23:36
Okay.
What if you could do the stuff you have to do, but in a nicer way?
But it'll never be as nice as a GUI.
It can't be
Aaron
00:23:39 – 00:23:43
That's you just changed you just changed the argument.
So the argument
But that is the argument.
Aaron
00:23:44 – 00:23:49
No.
No.
The question is you have to do stuff in the terminal.
That's true.
K.
Aaron
00:23:49 – 00:23:56
Why not, which was the statement, the question is, why not do the stuff you have to do in the terminal, but in a more pleasant way?
That's fine.
I'm fine with all that.
Aaron
00:23:57 – 00:24:01
Great.
Next segment.
We're done.
That's it.
We did it.
Aaron
00:24:01 – 00:24:02
That's that's the answer.
Aaron
00:24:03 – 00:24:05
Trying to shove what into the terminal?
I just feel like there's all this, like, people with the terminal apps, and it's like, it's gone from being, like, this is a fun little thing to make, like, these forums you have to build in the terminal nicer, which I'm all for.
I think that's great.
I think, like, prompt and all that stuff.
Awesome.
And then you had Joe doing, like, crazy, like, you we're building grass.
Aaron
00:24:24 – 00:24:25
Joe's having fun.
That's just insanity.
Right?
Which is fun and insanity.
I'm down with fun and insanity.
Right?
Mhmm.
But I think people are trying to merge those things into, like, something, more.
And I I don't think there's anything more there.
I think there's nothing more there.
I don't think people won't use it because people like to do things like it's like people use Vim.
Aaron
00:24:46 – 00:24:47
People do use Vim.
They wanna use Vim.
They wanna be different.
They wanna be they wanna be all say they use Vim.
Right?
Like, geeks always act like they don't have these sort of, clicks.
But, like, right, it's like I use Vim.
You can't even get out of Vim, which is true.
I can't get out of him.
Aaron
00:25:01 – 00:25:14
Which I propose just as a side note, I propose we retire that joke.
Can we can we retire that joke and centering a div?
Can we just say that those jokes are done and we can find some new content?
I'll find some new jokes in the
new year.
A div has actually been solved.
Getting out of VIM has not been solved.
Aaron
00:25:18 – 00:25:21
Don't so I don't use VIM.
Aaron
00:25:22 – 00:25:26
Is don't you just hit escape and then Nobody knows?
No.
Isn't it like isn't it like, exclamation q or something?
Aaron
00:25:31 – 00:25:35
Oh, yeah.
Maybe q exclamation or w q or something.
But I
Aaron
00:25:36 – 00:25:43
I feel like it's not that hard to get out of it.
That's the thing I don't understand.
I don't like it.
I'm never gonna use it.
If I accidentally end up in it, I know how to get out.
I don't know how to get out.
And
Aaron
00:25:45 – 00:25:46
then you're
typing you're typing stuff in your document that you wanna be typing because you thought you're trying to get out.
Aaron
00:25:50 – 00:25:51
That part is wonky.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You're checking out.
Aaron
00:25:52 – 00:25:52
Here's
Now you're making errors.
Yes.
Aaron
00:25:55 – 00:26:04
I don't I don't make errors.
Here's the thing.
Joe is doing Pong in the terminal because it's awesome.
He's doing webcams in the terminal because it's amazing.
Right?
Aaron
00:26:05 – 00:26:08
Jess Jess is doing Laravel prompts because we must.
Aaron
00:26:09 – 00:26:11
Makes it makes it a lot nicer.
Aaron
00:26:11 – 00:26:13
What is in the middle?
What's one thing in
the middle?
Don't you feel like there's all the stuff out there?
People are like, we're gonna do all this stuff in the terminal.
And I'm like, I don't wanna do stuff in the terminal.
Aaron
00:26:20 – 00:26:23
So I feel like all the stuff that's out there,
Aaron
00:26:23 – 00:26:25
Save for, like, the fun experimental stuff
Aaron
00:26:26 – 00:26:30
Is you're already on the terminal.
Let's make this better.
Here's something
Aaron
00:26:31 – 00:26:39
Coffee.
Ridiculous.
Putting coffee on the term buying coffee through the terminal That's ridiculous.
Ridiculous.
It's it's such a hard experience.
Why do I want this hard?
Now I forget that
Aaron
00:26:42 – 00:26:47
That shoehorning, I agree that that is shoehorning, but that's shoehorning for a shtick.
Aaron
00:26:48 – 00:26:49
I love a shtick.
I do love a shtick.
And you love a shtick.
I do.
That one that one, I think, is even more sensical than a lot of these other things.
Because it's like
Aaron
00:26:58 – 00:26:58
Okay.
You
have to name one.
Name one.
Just out there.
Right?
Don't you feel like people are building these two apps?
Aaron
00:27:05 – 00:27:06
No?
No.
You're squirming.
Aaron
00:27:07 – 00:27:08
What is give me one.
I don't know.
I don't I feel like
Aaron
00:27:10 – 00:27:17
this will buy.
Prompt's good.
Joe fun, terminal shtick.
We haven't found one yet.
I don't know.
I haven't used any of
Aaron
00:27:19 – 00:27:25
them.
Do you gotta okay.
You gotta name one.
Name just name even an example.
I don't Even an example.
I don't think your thing is totally like what I'm talking about because it's more useful.
Yeah.
But I don't think your thing is totally like it.
Although I do think your thing is, I I don't know if it needs to do all the stuff it's doing,
Aaron
00:27:35 – 00:27:37
but Story of my life.
But it's not like it's sort of stuff you do in the terminal anyway.
Groot, I believe.
I would use it.
But, like It is.
Aaron
00:27:44 – 00:27:45
Is that is
Aaron
00:27:46 – 00:27:46
Mhmm.
Yep.
So that's fine.
Here's the, you know, here's the interesting thing about it.
Maybe it's the way I use the terminal in the sense of I almost exclusively at this point use the terminal in the IDE.
So it's just a little bar at the bottom.
Like, I don't want a bunch of shit in there.
There's no room.
There's no room for chat.
Aaron
00:28:06 – 00:28:07
Run a command There's
Aaron
00:28:08 – 00:28:08
to move on.
Yeah.
There's no room for user interface in my little terminal window.
Yep.
Like, I don't want any user interface.
I just have text there and that's it.
It's one line.
That great.
And so all these things now require, like, before we use it, like, you have to open up the terminal.
Like, it's a big gooey window.
Right?
Because there's all kinds of stuff going on and there's form elements and whatever.
And, like, I don't know.
I don't wanna use the terminal that way.
Maybe maybe I don't wanna use the keyboard.
I'm not a keyboard guy.
Really?
I mean, I'm, like, obviously, the key shortcuts everybody has, but, like, I'm not like, my hands never leave the keyboard guy.
Are you are you are your hands never leave the keyboard guy?
Aaron
00:28:45 – 00:28:50
No.
My my hands will be on the keyboard, but my hand will also be on the mouse.
Right.
Well yeah.
I don't know.
Alright.
What other two ears are you using?
If you're we're building, are you using any other two e's?
Aaron
00:28:59 – 00:29:12
I don't know anything about literature, but I think you're you're what we would call an unreliable narrator.
Oh.
You know?
You're just saying you're just you're just saying two e's are bad, but you can't name one that's bad, and also you don't use them.
Aaron
00:29:13 – 00:29:14
it's an unreliable narrative.
Aaron
00:29:14 – 00:29:16
I don't know what that means, but you are one.
As these things fly by me now, I will start to log a couple and maybe try one or two and see
Aaron
00:29:22 – 00:29:23
We need a follow-up segment.
Well, I think we need a follow-up segment because I it's just like I constantly see the Tui Tui Tui Tui.
And, like, I'm just like I'm blocking out.
It's like it's like you could say Trump and Biden in your world.
Like, to me, the Tui is like as soon as
Aaron
00:29:35 – 00:29:37
you those words.
I don't even know what you just said.
To it.
But I I if I muted words, I would mute to it.
So I will, I will attempt to try some to it and see.
You don't
Aaron
00:29:50 – 00:29:53
you don't even have you don't even have to try.
I don't use any other two apps.
Oh, well, that that's my point.
So why is everybody building these things?
Aaron
00:29:57 – 00:30:03
I reject the premise.
I don't think that everybody's trying I don't think that everybody's trying to shove something with the terminal.
Constantly seed chewy apples.
Here's here's
Aaron
00:30:05 – 00:30:13
one that I saw.
Here's one that I saw.
Joe Tenenbaum Okay.
Did blue sky, a blue sky client internally.
I didn't even see that one.
Or maybe I didn't.
It's one of the ones that phased over me.
That's It's
Aaron
00:30:16 – 00:30:18
on it's on your favorite social network.
You should've
seen it.
That one doesn't exist.
Why does that exist?
Aaron
00:30:22 – 00:30:24
That is fun.
It's fun.
It's wacky.
Aaron
00:30:24 – 00:30:30
It's an experiment.
Does he actually think people are gonna use it?
I have no idea.
I don't know.
But it's cool.
I mean, I guess if everybody's just doing these things, it's like, hey.
This is my side hacky project just to, like, see if I can do something.
Let me I don't I don't care about that.
I don't care.
Everybody should do what they want.
Like, I don't care if people only live in the terminal.
I'm not here saying you should do it my way.
I'm just saying I don't think I get the idea that this would ever be better, objectively better.
Like, you may like it because it's different and you wanna be different, but I don't think it's objectively better than, like, the blue sky phone app.
Like, for example
Aaron
00:31:00 – 00:31:07
I don't know if there's anything objective about better.
That I think that's that's part of it.
It might be Objectively better.
That's a thing.
Aaron
00:31:12 – 00:31:28
There are things that are objectively better than other things, but this is very subjective.
This is like saying PHP storm is objectively better than VIM, which is something that I would sign on to.
But it's just, like, not true.
I prefer PHP storm over VIM.
Aaron
00:31:30 – 00:31:34
not a it's not objectively better.
There are just too many there are just too many dimensions to measure that on.
Hope I agree with you there.
Aaron
00:31:36 – 00:31:39
You think PHPStorm is objectively better than Vem?
No.
No.
No.
So in I think the ID is different.
I think the ID is primarily a textual thing.
Alright?
But if we're taking, like, the blue sky app, I think when I see a photo, the photo is gonna be better in the mobile app than on the terminal.
Aaron
00:31:53 – 00:31:54
Yes.
That I agree with.
Question.
Right?
It's not
Aaron
00:31:55 – 00:31:57
The photo will be better.
But this photo will be better, right, on the mobile app than in the terminal.
Aaron
00:32:02 – 00:32:02
Yes.
And so so right there, you have a huge part of a modern social network that is inferior just objectively to the terminal version.
Aaron
00:32:10 – 00:32:13
Well, no.
The photo quality is objectively inferior.
Right.
But the photos are
Aaron
00:32:15 – 00:32:17
still is still subjective.
Well, but not really because photos are a huge part of the experience of a modern social network.
Well, to who who would say photos are not a huge part of the experience?
Aaron
00:32:26 – 00:32:28
I don't know.
A lot of people probably.
I don't know.
I don't know.
But that's just one thing.
What about, I don't know.
What else would be different on the terminal?
I mean, you can only fit, you know, the the I guess, the orientation if you get if you make your terminal huge.
Aaron
00:32:41 – 00:32:43
Rendering speed is probably gonna be better in the
terminal.
Maybe.
So I I know that.
Aaron
00:32:50 – 00:32:58
My my only point is, that objective is I don't think I I don't think this is a measure of objectivity.
Objective is subjective.
No.
No.
No.
I don't
Aaron
00:33:01 – 00:33:02
know.
Not everything.
Objectivity is subjective.
Aaron
00:33:03 – 00:33:10
I see that I see that the point that the photo would be objectively better, higher quality, more legible
Aaron
00:33:11 – 00:33:20
But I don't think that I don't video.
I don't think that the experience of using a client is either objectively better
or worse.
I wanna post a photo.
How could it ever be better on the terminal than on the mobile client?
Aaron
00:33:27 – 00:33:29
I can't, but that's not what I'm arguing.
I'm arguing.
I'm arguing that I'm arguing that make it objectively better.
Uh-huh.
Aaron
00:33:34 – 00:33:44
Some some peep you're saying, you're saying that everyone values the same things that you do, and I'm saying that they don't.
That's it.
I don't think everybody values the same things I do.
I'm saying that objectively, a large part of a modern social network is sharing videos in some fashion, consuming videos in some fashion, consuming photos in some fashion, sharing photos in some fashion.
Aaron
00:33:59 – 00:34:01
On average, I agree.
And that so that alone is practically enough to say that the, mobile experience is objectively better.
I think that alone is enough.
And there's probably all these other trade offs.
And the upsides are minimal.
I don't know.
Aaron
00:34:18 – 00:34:38
I don't know.
I don't think it's subjective.
I think there are people that long to return to the text only interface.
And for them, a terminal client would be better, which if there is one person who decides it's better over there, then it's not an objective fact that the other thing is better.
Oh, that's not true at all.
There's a lot of people in the world who think the world is fat is flat, but that doesn't mean they're they're correct because one person believes that.
Aaron
00:34:47 – 00:34:48
That is that is a
matter Objectively false.
Aaron
00:34:49 – 00:34:54
That the world is not flat.
A factual matter.
Yes.
That's correct.
That's what yes.
Aaron
00:34:54 – 00:34:56
I agree.
That's a factual matter.
But I think a lot of these things are factual matters.
A photo renders better
Aaron
00:35:00 – 00:35:04
Which I have seeded.
The app.
Yeah.
Well, that's that's that's that's a fact.
But that's just a fact.
It's just better.
Right?
So once you have a certain number of those things that are factually better, then the product is objectively better.
Aaron
00:35:14 – 00:35:15
I just I I Just because
one person likes this over here better doesn't mean objectively that that that doesn't mean it's entirely subjective because one person says, they like this one better.
Aaron
00:35:25 – 00:35:35
But I think the whole point is Yeah.
That experiences are subjective.
Yes.
Right?
People value different things.
Aaron
00:35:35 – 00:35:55
Sure.
People love and hate different things.
Mhmm.
And so if what we're talking about is an experience, and that is that is what we're talking about, the experience of, you know, exploring blue sky on the terminal or the experience of exploring blue sky on the web.
If everyone values things differently let's let's take the picture example.
Aaron
00:35:55 – 00:36:11
Mhmm.
Some people might prefer that the pictures are low res.
Some people might actually prefer that even though objectively Mhmm.
The photo is more, accurate, higher resolution Right.
Better quality, even though that's better on the web.
Aaron
00:36:11 – 00:36:37
Mhmm.
Some people might prefer that the pictures, be low res because they find they find themselves easily distracted by pictures and videos, and they just wanna see text updates with, like, maybe a hint of what the picture is, but not enough to be like, oh, I'm gonna spend the next four or five minutes on Reddit exploring this idea.
Mhmm.
So that's the point is, like, I think, objectively, matters of fact can be objective.
The Earth is not flat.
Aaron
00:36:37 – 00:36:56
Matters of subjective would be matters of experience.
Like, you can't say, objectively, the weather is better in Florida than it is in, California.
Like, it's it's objectively different.
I agree.
But you can't say that it's objectively better.
I guess I agree with that example, sort of.
I think there is the idea that, like, people have a cons if you say in general, the concept of good weather, what does that mean?
Yes.
You'll find people who are like, I love the Arctic.
The Arctic is my favorite.
Right?
But, like, if we say in general, what does the term good weather mean to you?
Most people are gonna say somewhere between seventy and eighty five degrees and sunny.
Right?
Like that's what most people are gonna say.
And so you know, in the context of most people, they might say that California has better weather than Russia.
Right.
Like just objectively generally in the common use of those terms.
Now, again, you could get into all these edge cases, right, of like, well, yeah, I love the, the Arctic Circle.
Okay.
Fine.
Like that's yes.
For you, you love the Arctic Circle.
So it is on different levels.
Any individual, of course, everything's subjective for any individual.
That's true.
But then when you're talking about a broad spectrum, then I think there are just things that are better or worse, and that it's not subjective.
You know what I'm saying?
Aaron
00:38:03 – 00:38:06
I kinda know what you're saying.
Where do you wanna go next?
Alright.
What should we do next?
See, I knew that one was gonna be a little divisive there.
But I was a good one prepared.
That's on me.
That's on me.
I wasn't fully prepared.
Aaron
00:38:14 – 00:38:19
See, that is on you.
You're telling okay.
That is.
Yeah.
You're telling me all these exists, and you're like, I can't name them.
I die.
It's just like it's like the term.
It's like every other Chewy.
Is like Chewy.
Chewy.
Mhmm.
Alright.
What's going on with Postgres?
Your Postgres.
Aaron
00:38:31 – 00:38:32
Is it is it Yeah.
Just Postgres.
Is it is it your course?
Is it the platform?
Postgres?
Just the course.
Aaron
00:38:38 – 00:38:44
So last week, I think I did 17 sixteen, seventeen, 18 videos last week.
How do
you do so many videos?
That's crazy.
Aaron
00:38:46 – 00:38:53
Just struggle with existential despair till about 01:30 or two, and then You're still on.
Videos before the first time to go home.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:38:54 – 00:39:11
great strategy.
So I think, there's still there's still maybe five more that I need to do, but there are no more there are no more new modules that I need to do.
So I knocked out this past week, I knocked out JSON and, PG vector and extensions.
Aaron
00:39:12 – 00:39:18
Oh, I'm teasing.
JSON and vectors are hot.
They're good ones.
They're very, very good.
Very, very relevant.
Aaron
00:39:19 – 00:39:34
So I knocked those out.
Steve's editing them today.
We'll probably, you know, release tomorrow or the next day, something.
And that, I think, is gonna take us out of early access and basically finish the course.
So we should get a nice big bump on on sales.
Aaron
00:39:34 – 00:39:57
Yeah.
That'll be so nice.
And it's just a massive relief.
It just feels so much better to have that off my plate.
And so in addition to, you know, Postgres, there are a number of open items, across the rest of my life, and I've written them all down on Post it notes.
Aaron
00:39:57 – 00:40:29
Oh.
And the goal is to decrease the number of open loops, in my life.
And so getting Postgres finished, merging some stuff into solo, getting that released, finishing the new aaronfrances.com, all of this stuff that's just kinda, like, hanging over my head Yeah.
Trying to get all of these things, like, closed out before opening any new any new items, and, Postgres is is one of them.
So we made it.
Nice.
Congratulations.
You should try putting yourself on a timer.
I'm still liking the timer thing.
Start a timer for
Aaron
00:40:36 – 00:40:37
yourself.
Pomodoro?
Yeah.
Pomodoro.
I've been using toggle just, like, actually time tracking, like, as if I'm billing somebody Uh-huh.
But I'm not.
And start the timer.
I'm working on this thing.
Work.
Work.
Work.
Stop the timer.
And it's kinda like a nice little, like, feedbacky mechanism for yourself.
Aaron
00:40:53 – 00:40:54
I like that.
Door tower would be a similar thing.
I'm probably door timer doesn't have, like, some of the other benefits of, like, being able to see the exact things you maybe spent time on or, you know, if you want some of that data.
But, but it's even simpler, obviously, just doing door timer.
So yeah.
Alright.
There's a lot of open items.
You still have a JavaScript library to build.
Aaron
00:41:16 – 00:41:17
I do.
I do.
You've got a finish this two e thing you're building.
Aaron
00:41:20 – 00:41:22
Yep.
Much to your dismay.
I don't know.
Do you think it's what do you what are what's the feedback you're getting on this thing?
Are people using it?
Aaron
00:41:28 – 00:41:40
Very good.
Very good.
Yeah.
I think it's an objectively better experience.
No.
Aaron
00:41:40 – 00:41:53
People people seem to like it.
Nice.
Lots of, you know, lots of feature requests, obviously.
Yeah.
But the thing that I the thing that I need to merge in is, like, a fundamental kind of rewriting of the whole thing.
Aaron
00:41:55 – 00:42:02
And it opens it opens up just so many more use cases and ease of, like, extensibility.
Like, plug in architecture stuff?
Aaron
00:42:04 – 00:42:33
Kinda.
I mean, it doesn't have a plug in architecture, but there is an underlying.
So the thing the the hardest thing I've ever programmed, this is maybe true, at least top two or three, is what I'm about to merge in, and that's a screen it's a terminal screen emulator.
And so I take all of the output of the underlying processes Okay.
Processes, and run them through this PHP class that is a screen emulator.
Aaron
00:42:33 – 00:42:49
Mhmm.
And then I output from that screen emulator, then I output the output to the actual user's terminal.
Right.
And so, basically, I had to I had to reimplement a a a terminal in PHP.
Aaron
00:42:52 – 00:42:54
So why?
Yeah.
Because,
Aaron
00:42:56 – 00:43:09
We'll take one specific code.
So there there are these things called ANSI codes, that control, like, how stuff shows up on the terminal.
Right?
You pass in this wonky code, the text turns blue.
Very weird, very old.
Aaron
00:43:10 – 00:43:22
Doesn't matter.
You pass in this other code, and you can move the cursor all around the screen.
Right?
So you can move it to the top.
The code that we'll talk about is the code to clear the entire screen.
Aaron
00:43:22 – 00:43:40
So there is a code, I think it's like two k or two j or something that, like, clears the entire screen.
I'm not in control of these underlying processes.
Right?
They could use those codes at any point to build their own user interfaces.
They could use those codes at any point that they want.
Aaron
00:43:40 – 00:43:56
In fact, Laravel prompts does use codes like that.
So when you're typing in the multisearch and Laravel prompts, it's like rendering the whole thing, jumping back five lines clearing, and then rendering again.
That's that's its loop, is it just clears itself over and over and over, drawing frame by frame.
Aaron
00:43:57 – 00:44:20
As I'm gathering out the output from these underlying processes, and then if I just simply pipe it through to the user's terminal, the prompts code, which is, like, clear the screen, is clearing all of my UI.
Right.
It's like clearing my Chrome.
It doesn't it doesn't know that it's existing in this goofy little pane.
It's like, you told me to clear the terminal.
Aaron
00:44:20 – 00:44:23
I'm gonna goddamn clear the terminal.
And I'm like, no.
Not my stuff.
It's almost like the terminal wasn't designed to do this.
It's almost like
Aaron
00:44:27 – 00:44:29
that.
Except it was.
So here's the thing.
Aaron
00:44:30 – 00:45:00
Here's the thing.
So now what I do is there's a buffer in between, the underlying process Right.
And the user's terminal, and that is my screen class.
And my screen class, emulates all of those ANSI codes, on an in memory buffer.
So, like, I consume all of the output, and then I see a clear screen code, and I clear I clear in my in in memory buffer Right.
Aaron
00:45:00 – 00:45:01
Just my thing.
Aaron
00:45:02 – 00:45:13
And then when I output it to the terminal, the only thing that's left are, maybe some color NC codes and stuff, but there are no more there's no more stuff that can mess with my surrounding Chrome.
Aaron
00:45:14 – 00:45:19
And so I I've implemented, you know, cursor movements, screen clear, line clear, line up, line down.
Aaron
00:45:21 – 00:45:24
Dude, there are a lot of ANSI codes.
Aaron
00:45:26 – 00:45:42
And so that's the big that's the big, like, new piece of programming that I've done.
I've, you know, I've written forums a thousand times.
I've written, you know, background jobs a thousand times.
I've never written a screen emulator.
This is real programming.
Aaron
00:45:43 – 00:45:46
Yeah.
Yeah.
I'm using bit masks and Right.
All kinds of stuff.
On there.
You're at the metal.
Aaron
00:45:48 – 00:46:05
I'm at the metal.
It's so freaking fun.
Okay.
And so this allows like, this just opens up so many more use cases, including, like, interactive mode so you can, you know, interact with the underlying process and pass input to it, that kind of stuff.
So Mhmm.
Aaron
00:46:05 – 00:46:17
Once I get that merged, that'll be a huge, like, weight off of my shoulders to to close that open loop.
So, yeah, a lot of fun.
Wow.
You can just do things, Ian.
You could sort of, but they have trade offs.
They have trade offs.
So that'd be a big thing to maintain.
I'm just gonna say.
I mean, do one that with that.
I mean, probably a million edge cases.
What about here's an interesting thing.
So you have Postgres and you're done.
It's kinda interesting, like software versus something like that, you know, and like how being done like, you're a you're a guy who wants things to be done.
Aaron
00:46:41 – 00:46:42
Boy.
I
think it's something interesting about I
Aaron
00:46:44 – 00:46:46
am.
Yeah.
I'm a completionist.
Yeah.
You're a completionist.
But software is never complete.
That's the thing with software
Aaron
00:46:50 – 00:46:51
Mhmm.
Which is terrible.
It's the worst part by far of software because that's never done.
So I don't know.
I think that's interesting.
As you're in your whole, like, you know, when we're gonna do and the different projects and things, I feel like that's that's interesting.
It's like things that can get done and be done.
Aaron
00:47:06 – 00:47:08
Yes.
Things that can be done.
Like, truly done.
Not like I did the release.
That's not done.
That's just like the start of
Aaron
00:47:14 – 00:47:16
That is the thousand bugs
and everything else.
Right?
Like, but something that is done done.
It's like, oh, this is done.
I never have to go back to this again, potentially.
Aaron
00:47:24 – 00:47:27
Or if you like I do like video courses for that reason.
Video courses
are so good.
Yeah.
That's the dream.
That is the dream.
With something.
Aaron
00:47:32 – 00:47:33
Can you imagine?
I haven't been done with anything in twenty years.
Like, I might take something off my to do list, but just something else fills it in because that's the core project exists and is ongoing forever.
Aaron
00:47:43 – 00:47:45
That's why you're so tired over four years.
Aaron
00:47:46 – 00:47:48
You haven't been done with anything in twenty years.
Aaron
00:47:49 – 00:47:50
You do.
You do.
I've accepted my faith.
That's fine.
Aaron
00:47:53 – 00:48:02
I will never accept my faith.
That is also one thing that is true about me is I will never accept my fate.
Aaron
00:48:03 – 00:48:05
I will change I will change my fate.
So do you think this, the thing you're building, could it be part of Laravel at some point?
Is that a goal you have for it to be in the mothership?
I think it's too much that it
Aaron
00:48:15 – 00:48:15
could be in
Aaron
00:48:17 – 00:48:25
It's too much.
I was on the Laravel News creator spotlight a day or two ago.
It hasn't it hasn't come out yet.
But Eric asked me the same question.
Mhmm.
Aaron
00:48:25 – 00:48:42
So I'm gonna scoop him, but y'all go listen to his show anyway, but I'm gonna scoop him anyway.
He asked me that, and my my thought is, I don't want to foist this upon Laravel.
Right?
Because if I do, then I'm like, yeah.
As you all maintain it, good luck.
Then you're done.
No.
That's great.
You're you're completed.
Aaron
00:48:46 – 00:48:52
But we burn we burn some goodwill if I foist it upon them and then say see you.
Raven's project.
Yeah.
Have fun.
That's not great.
Aaron
00:48:53 – 00:49:02
There is a possibility that do you remember when, I think it was Fadaloper trusted proxy.
I think that was the package.
Aaron
00:49:03 – 00:49:22
It was in everything.
It was in everything.
I could see a world where the, Laravel application starter repo, not like the framework framework, but I guess it's Laravel slash Laravel instead of Laravel slash framework.
Not even the starter kits, but, like, the, when you do Laravel new
Aaron
00:49:24 – 00:49:32
It, like, brings down, like, a application.
I could see it being required in there.
Mhmm.
But still
what I mean.
That's essentially the same thing.
Aaron
00:49:34 – 00:50:06
It's it's it's not, though.
So if it in like, if you do Laravel new and then you open up composer.JSON and you see, Aaron Francis slash solo, I could totally see that.
What I don't think will ever happen is it is somehow baked into, like, the Illuminate packages or even even, like, under the Laravel namespace like Laravel prompts is.
Because the moment it becomes Laravel slash solo, I'm off the hook.
And I just it's a huge thing to ask someone else to maintain that doesn't have the context.
Aaron
00:50:06 – 00:50:06
You know?
Well, see, I think that the way they operate at this point, they would never put it in the way you're describing unless they control them.
I don't think they would ever do what they do with Fadalupe.
I think that's, like, in history.
Aaron
00:50:17 – 00:50:17
They're moving away
Aaron
00:50:18 – 00:50:21
I would think because of Excel.
Well I
just think they have the people.
Like, they're not gonna wanna be dependent on if they're like, this is the way a new when you learn about new and the expectation is you're gonna get this tab command line, the thing with all this stuff.
Cool.
Like, if they want that, then I don't think they would ever do it and just be like, we don't control this in some ways.
And Yeah.
That's true.
User interface to
Aaron
00:50:41 – 00:50:43
They control yeah.
They do control everything now.
Well I mean,
Aaron
00:50:43 – 00:50:51
If they want it if they want it, they can have it.
Also, as with as with all things, I am for sale.
Sure.
Yeah.
I'm a % for sale.
Aaron
00:50:51 – 00:50:56
So Tom Tom, COO Tom, give me a call.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Drop a bad stack on
Aaron
00:50:57 – 00:51:02
can have it.
No.
Tom's too busy.
Tom's too important to do podcasts, especially with us
Aaron
00:51:03 – 00:51:04
Us jokers.
You know?
Yeah.
He's not he's not that kind of guy.
Aaron
00:51:06 – 00:51:08
He's locked in all day.
Yeah.
I don't know.
I just think he's yeah.
I don't know what he's I don't know what he does all day, but I don't think he's listening to podcasts.
Well, yeah, I had another question along their lines, and I can't think of it.
What about so now would you ever well, I guess no.
I I guess you're not gonna do that.
Alright.
Let's move
Aaron
00:51:25 – 00:51:26
on.
Wow.
What what was the question?
If you would make this your Laracon e u talk, but I think you're going to stick with the jobs for flatbed.
Aaron
00:51:33 – 00:51:36
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Too late.
Well, you got you got a couple of months.
Yep.
It's gonna be busy.
At least your courses are mostly It's
Aaron
00:51:42 – 00:51:43
all it's always busy.
There's no other
way.
Videos?
What's the I know you have some screencasting stuff.
But besides that, do you have of course, SQLite, is that totally wrapped up?
Aaron
00:51:50 – 00:52:16
Yeah.
SQLite's wrapped up.
The next so the next course like, the next proper course that we do is probably going to be, intro to SQL.
So it's gonna be fundamentally different than SQLite or Postgres because those targeted those targeted intermediate.
So that's not a I just graduated from boot camp.
Aaron
00:52:16 – 00:52:34
Let me go learn about how b trees work under the hood.
Like, that ain't gonna happen.
So I think there's, this is this is one of those things where I'm having to observe the world and draw conclusions from it because I would not watch an introduction to SQL course.
Aaron
00:52:35 – 00:52:37
I would never watch that.
I think Right.
What's the point?
Aaron
00:52:38 – 00:52:52
But observing the world, those courses do great.
Mhmm.
And and being rational and using my powerful brain, there are more beginners than there are intermediates.
Like, I can just I can just do that in my head.
Usually, people can't jump to pass beginner to intermediate.
Aaron
00:52:56 – 00:53:17
Inverted pyramid does not apply here.
It's just a regular pyramid.
And so thinking about, thinking about a few different a few different vectors, one being ease of production.
This is going to be I could sit down today without an outline and probably have it finished by Friday.
And that to me is a great delight.
Aaron
00:53:18 – 00:53:20
Boy, that sounds that sounds I know.
Optimistic.
You think you
Aaron
00:53:21 – 00:53:23
think that's Absolutely.
I guess details in the sequel syntax.
You know, there's a lot of stuff.
Aaron
00:53:27 – 00:53:33
I'm very I I'm very confident.
Yes.
I'm What about, big believer in the old Aaron Francis?
Aaron
00:53:34 – 00:53:44
Open question.
I mean, I may I may highlight some nuances between, you know, the different engines and stuff.
Yeah.
But the the point is one vector is ease of production.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:53:44 – 00:53:47
That is, like, fundamentally different.
I mean, I've still got
gonna be way easier than I
Aaron
00:53:48 – 00:54:08
still got, you know, piles of Postgres docs here because I haven't, you know, I haven't cleaned off my desk, and they're all just hanging around.
And so it's like, boy, it is gonna be nice to do something where I don't literally have to print out a ream of paper and pour through the docs just to make sure that I'm teaching everything Yeah.
Correctly.
I know you think it's
just, like, straight select, update, delete
Aaron
00:54:12 – 00:54:12
Joins.
Aaron
00:54:13 – 00:54:15
It's like Little bit little bit of indexes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
Not like triggers.
Not getting to that level.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:54:19 – 00:54:37
Just the.
Not getting to like not even getting to the underlying like what is a B tree?
Like why would you use this for a primary key?
It's like if you want that, I talk about that in other places.
And so ease of production and size of size of potential audience.
Aaron
00:54:37 – 00:55:13
And the thing is, this is not congruent with to my knowledge, this is not congruent with my existing audience because I feel like a lot of people that I'm friends with or follow me are primarily intermediates or or better.
And that could be that could be availability bias.
Like, that could be the people that I know that follow me or the people that respond.
I know that, like, these people, they don't need an intro course.
But there could be 90% of the people that never respond that are juniors that are like, man, I can't follow anything in this master Postgres course, but they never speak up.
Aaron
00:55:13 – 00:55:25
And so, ease of production, size of market, and then there's an experiment there there's an experimental part of this where it's, what if we sold this course for $49 Right.
Or 59.
Aaron
00:55:27 – 00:55:28
$1.99 or $2.99 or something.
Francis ecosystem.
Yeah.
Exactly.
Loss leader.
Aaron
00:55:32 – 00:55:43
So, yeah, it'll be interesting, and it rounds it rounds out the offering quite a bit.
You know, if you graduate from intro to SQL, you can move on to Postgres, SQLite, MySQL.
Yeah.
Aaron
00:55:44 – 00:56:18
And this will also be it'll be interesting because it'll be less of a, it'll be less of like a hype driven marketing strategy.
Because, again, I think most of the people that follow me are not beginners, but it'll be interesting to see, like, can we pull off can we pull off, like, a successful profitable course without relying on, like, our friends to buy it?
And I think the answer is yes.
Like, I I the number of people that have bought Postgres is more friends than I have.
So we're already proving that a little bit.
Do you think that, like, this seems to me, like, almost the kind of thing, though, that might even be better in, like, well, I think two different avenues come to mind.
One is, like, build the course the way you're talking about, and, like, you try to partner with things like code schools and stuff like that.
I'd be like, we'll give you some kind of whatever.
There's bulk pricing, whatever.
You can stream it as much as you want to people in your courses, whatever.
Aaron
00:56:39 – 00:56:39
Come up
with some deal for that.
But the other side would be more like you put it yourself on you Dom Demi or one of these Mhmm.
You know, these big platforms.
Right?
Mhmm.
That's like exposure for you to this audience that you don't have so much of currently.
But then that gives you access to the audience to be like, okay.
Now you've graduated this.
I have these other courses over here.
Aaron
00:56:59 – 00:57:00
You definitely
let you do that.
But there's I have other courses, that you can buy.
So it, like, leads more of a yeah.
Like, a marketing channel more than, like, directly profitable.
Aaron
00:57:10 – 00:57:22
Yeah.
So the Udemy thing is tough.
I have a few friends that have put courses on Udemy, and you're just not in control of you're not in control of pricing at all.
Aaron
00:57:24 – 00:57:35
You kind of are, but they're they strong-arm you pretty hard.
Mhmm.
You're competing you're competing with a lot of, what I would call low quality courses.
Aaron
00:57:36 – 00:57:36
That's good,
Aaron
00:57:38 – 00:58:02
It's not necessarily good because, if you look up intro to SQL and mine that is, like, in my opinion, very good and very high quality is let's say on Udemy, we knock it down to $19, and there's another one that's $4.99, which is true.
Right.
They're just gonna be like, I don't I don't know that other guy.
That's way too expensive at $19.
Are you crazy?
Aaron
00:58:02 – 00:58:18
I'm just gonna buy the cheap one.
So that's a problem.
But then also, from my conversations with these friends, getting people off the platform is incredibly difficult.
Right.
And so you have to bake in some things like go over here to sign up to get the source code or something like that.
Aaron
00:58:19 – 00:58:28
like that whole stuff.
Yeah.
And Udemy, of course, doesn't want you to take the audience with you.
So, yeah, I don't know.
I, I I'm pretty,
I mean, to me, it would even be, I would, and I don't know if you, Udemy is the right platform for it, but it's more like, I, I think you would charge nothing.
Like, I think ideally it's free.
Like you just become the biggest sequel course, entry level sequel course, whatever that, or it's a dollar 9, whatever, whatever the best strategy is to becoming the biggest, forget making money on that.
And then you're just trying to grow your audience because you're really trying to sell the more premium items now.
Yes.
Like if that's, if they make it impossible, like I don't, who know?
I don't even know.
Maybe they have rules where you can't even mention things that are off platform.
Aaron
00:59:00 – 00:59:00
Right.
Who knows?
Right.
Like, I don't know.
But that kind of idea where it's like, if you could build something in a week that opens up the opportunity for it to be a marketing thing more even than a direct profit making thing potentially, especially to, like, as, like, a way into an audience you don't already have.
Aaron
00:59:16 – 00:59:28
Yeah.
That's an interesting idea.
Possibly.
I'd be curious if Udemy even allows fully free stuff because that doesn't help them out either.
But that's an that is that is an interesting idea.
Aaron
00:59:28 – 00:59:30
Yeah.
I'm not gonna
Aaron
00:59:31 – 00:59:32
But that's an interesting idea.
Just kicking around ideas.
You never know.
You never know.
Might come up.
Alright.
What else is going on?
Oh, I found my budgeting app.
Aaron
00:59:40 – 00:59:42
Yeah.
You're not building it anymore?
No.
Fuck.
Come on.
Who is that guy who even came on here and said he should build there?
He's going to build.
He was thinking about building.
Aaron
00:59:48 – 00:59:48
That's that's I'm
Aaron
00:59:49 – 00:59:57
A move that's a move for a much younger man to build a budgeting man.
Build a budgeting app.
Are you kidding me?
We're out we're out of firepower at this point.
Maybe somebody who's, like, 42 could do it, but I can't.
Maybe.
I'm too old.
Too old.
Aaron
01:00:01 – 01:00:03
Alright.
Tell us.
I got this pain.
I got this wheelchair.
I can't Got the wonky knee.
Blood just drops.
I got the bad knee.
The whole thing.
I got the I got I don't even have a gallbladder.
Okay?
I got no gallbladder.
Aaron
01:00:12 – 01:00:13
That is true.
What am I supposed to do?
Aaron
01:00:14 – 01:00:16
So Not process fats.
That's for
sure.
That's for sure.
Monarch.
So
Aaron
01:00:21 – 01:00:21
Monarch.
Friend of the show, Tom Westrick.
Thanks, Tom.
Aaron
01:00:26 – 01:00:27
Thanks, Tom.
Aaron
01:00:28 – 01:00:31
What is it?
Monarch budgeting.
And it's very good.
I'm very happy with it.
It's definitely better than all the other ones.
But.
Monarch.
Monarch.
Margin.
And, you know, let me just see what the
Aaron
01:00:43 – 01:00:44
So I'm gonna go ahead and
48.
They say Monarch.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Monarch money.
Aaron
01:00:47 – 01:00:51
Monarch money dot com.
Alright.
Yep.
Accept cookies.
Sure.
Aaron
01:00:51 – 01:00:58
I love cookies.
The modern way to manage money.
K.
It's making me nervous already.
Modern way.
Aaron
01:00:58 – 01:01:00
What does that mean?
AI?
Yeah.
Aaron
01:01:01 – 01:01:02
Oh, good.
This looks good.
Well, I don't know.
They all have, like, this, you know, auto categorization and all
Aaron
01:01:06 – 01:01:06
Right.
Right.
Bad for all of them.
Theirs seems slightly better than some of the others, but still definitely gets a lot of things wrong.
Although we will be using it for a couple weeks.
Aaron
01:01:14 – 01:01:18
I don't know.
This looks pretty good.
Tell me tell me what's, first impressions here.
It's very good.
It's got everything we wanted.
So it does, like, other assets.
So you can have, like, investments or whatever.
So it's like your whole financial picture, not just the budget.
But it's not a doing a job in the budget.
The categories within the budget have the right amount of controls.
Some of the rollover stuff has the right amount of controls.
It's got this nice dashboard thing you can set up.
It seems to work well.
It's fast.
I was using this Copilot thing for a while, but it was so slow.
Aaron
01:01:45 – 01:01:46
It was
Aaron
01:01:48 – 01:01:51
this is Does it have a fast enough client?
Can I use it for a
clean line?
Figure you will build one.
So if I can get you on it, then I'll be able to access it to the terminal, which would be very nice.
It will be very nice.
Mobile app.
Aaron
01:01:58 – 01:01:59
K.
It doesn't have a desktop app, which I'm fine with.
Aaron
01:02:01 – 01:02:03
I'm fine.
I I love the browser.
Browser's fine.
Browser's good.
So, yeah, I don't know.
It's been so far so good.
You know, it's so annoying.
The South
Aaron
01:02:11 – 01:02:11
is better than the
third one, and everyone you go through with the whole
Aaron
01:02:13 – 01:02:14
Oh, dude.
Connect all the things and whatever doesn't work on plaid, use this FX service or whatever.
So you're going between the services.
It's a total nightmare, but everything's connected.
Everything seems to sync reviewing, categorizing transactions seems to work.
It also has, which is, was the main reason I wanted to build my own budgeting app is it has and this is actually just launched in November.
So I just happened to be right on time, which is the ability to have a budget that is not like, to the penny.
So it's not that you just set up everything to the penny and then,
Aaron
01:02:50 – 01:02:51
oh, you can do a Vibes budget.
It's a Vibes budget.
So you have, like, non monthly things for, like, your taxes or things that happen, you
Aaron
01:02:57 – 01:02:57
know,
once a year, twice a year, insurance, whatever.
Then you could have, like, your, if you're what they call it, but, like, utility like, the stuff that just happens, like, your mortgage, utilities, just stuff that happens every month kinda structured.
So those two don't really have, like in this setup, if you use what they call the flexible budgeting, those are just kind of locked in whatever the costs are for the individual items.
And then you have the flexible part of the budget, which is like everything else, which is where, like, I could spend more or less on clothes, on entertainment, on groceries even potentially.
Like, these are areas where I can choose I dig.
To change or not change as I see fit.
And so then you have just a budget that's like, hey.
It's like x dollars for all these categories, which are all the categories that you actually control.
Like everything else, you don't actually control your mortgage.
Right?
Like you controlling that is a much bigger thing.
Like, yes, I could control it by selling my house and buying cheap house for me.
Expensive house.
Yeah.
But it's like, that's a bigger thing.
That's not like day in, day out.
I have any control over that.
So this way, it's like just a budget for the core things that you're like, I wanna try to spend less on superfluous crap.
So you basically have, like, a superfluous crap area of the budget now.
That's what the budget is.
And it's still tracking all the other stuff, so you still can see charts and data and whatever.
But in terms of what you're trying to hit, the number you're trying to hit each month, that is just gonna be these things that are more variable.
And
Aaron
01:04:19 – 01:04:34
Let let me ask you this.
Can you do, I would have to imagine you can.
Can you do tracking only?
Can do you have to, like, create a budget?
Because in, I feel like in YNAB, they're like, you gotta allocate.
Aaron
01:04:35 – 01:04:43
Right.
You gotta allocate every dollar.
And I'm like, honestly, I just kinda wanna see where everything's going.
I don't wanna, like, I don't wanna live by the budget.
I just wanna die by the budget.
Aaron
01:04:43 – 01:04:50
I just wanna Yeah.
I just wanna see where everything's going, and then I'll make a decision based on vibes if we need to trim Which
is kinda how I think about it too.
It's like we don't even track what we spend the money on now.
So, like, step one isn't even, like, the budget.
Aaron
01:04:57 – 01:04:57
It's like
it's like gotta track.
See where the money is even going, and then we can decide what the budget a little bit.
So we do have a number in the budget, but this is like, it's just a number for the whole thing.
So, yes, you can just import stuff and categorize it and not do any budget at all, and that's fine.
And then you'll just have all that data about where the money's going.
Or you can do the a regular budget, which is, like, to the penny, it's all gonna line up, or you can do this flexible budget.
That's what we're doing.
And even the flexible budget has a couple a really interesting thing, which is that, okay, you say, okay, these 20 categories are the things that are variable and the things we're trying to like get our hands around really.
So we're gonna say, okay, the budget for these 20 things is X that's the flexible budget, but you could still optionally have line item budgets for certain things.
So let's say for groceries, we still just wanna say that is whatever it is, dollars 2,000 a month on groceries.
And so that can even still have a line item, even though the other ones don't have individual line items.
And it's just an overarching budget that they're constrained within.
Aaron
01:06:04 – 01:06:04
So if
you are one on a few items.
Yeah.
It's like, okay, we've tracked this now.
We know in these particular categories, it's like DoorDash and eating out or whatever.
Like we wanna control that.
Let's like literally put an actual value on just that category so that we can try to stay in that category within a certain budget.
And then the other things are still variable.
Clothing might be zero in one month might be $300 next month, whatever it is.
So, so yeah, so it's so far so good.
I mean, we've only been using it.
Aaron
01:06:33 – 01:06:33
It looks great.
Whatever.
So it's, it's very nice.
Yeah.
They just redid the UI actually, like in this week.
So it's also a change.
I refreshed the screen and, like, the UI changed on me.
I was like, oh, wow.
Please do the update.
Not totally different, just, like, more of a design update.
But, yeah, so I would say check it out.
If you're in the market, very happy with it.
Mobile app's solid.
Desktop app's solid.
Yeah.
Aaron
01:06:59 – 01:07:06
I look forward I look forward to next week, seeing if you're Yes.
Still seeing if you're still using it or what problems you found.
Let me tell you.
If this one doesn't work, I think we're just done.
I don't I think we just go back to we don't have any idea what we spent on the week.
Aaron
01:07:12 – 01:07:13
We have no idea
how much money we have, how much we've spent.
We're moving again.
We've just been let go and let God.
Yes.
We've connected these accounts three times now.
Jamie's moved everything and reset things up three times now.
I think we're all done with the moving and the setting up.
So this doesn't work.
Aaron
01:07:28 – 01:07:36
Here here's a here's a litmus test.
Does Monarch understand that when you pay off a credit card, you've paid off a credit card?
Aaron
01:07:36 – 01:07:43
does it does it make all those entries that are like, oh, guys, come on.
I didn't lose a bunch of money.
I've just paid off
an Internal entry.
I think it does correctly do that.
Yes.
Aaron
01:07:46 – 01:07:48
That's good.
I believe so.
That's good.
I
believe it does.
It has that concept of, like, where it knows this went to this credit card.
If you have it all set up on both sides of the transaction,
Aaron
01:07:56 – 01:07:56
I think.
Like, you have to have the bank account and the credit card all in there.
I'm pretty sure that works.
But, again, it's only in a week, so I haven't actually seen that happen.
Gotten that far yet?
Yeah.
But I'm pretty sure let's do that.
Aaron
01:08:12 – 01:08:15
Yeah.
Alright.
Let's get on.
Got a
Aaron
01:08:16 – 01:08:20
Let's see what else I have here.
We can end on, what time is
Aaron
01:08:22 – 01:08:28
Yeah.
Do we wanna do that?
Let's just end on that.
What time actually, let me actual question.
What time is it?
Aaron
01:08:28 – 01:08:28
We should be
talking about the sponsor too.
Aaron
01:08:30 – 01:08:34
Let's talk about the sponsors first.
We're only at an hour eight.
So we'll talk about sponsors and end with what time is it?
Alright.
I think we talked about this already that the Thunk guys are building us a little ad platform.
Aaron
01:08:39 – 01:08:40
They yes.
We did.
Advertising platform.
So, Daniel says they're pretty much done.
I think they have to do a little bit of work on the Stripe end of it.
I think he's also moving right now.
Aaron
01:08:51 – 01:08:52
So I think so.
There's a little you know, that's slightly delayed.
But, shortly here, we should have that.
And then, like, we talked about, we'd be able to be able to self serve, to advertise on the show, to be able to get your brand name in front of our audience, which I think is gonna be really cool for a very modest rate.
I'm very excited about that.
Aaron
01:09:13 – 01:09:18
I'm very excited about this.
Of all of your handful of good ideas, this is definitely one of
them.
Yeah.
I know.
It'll be interesting to see.
I wonder if people are gonna do it, so that'll be fascinating to see if
Aaron
01:09:25 – 01:09:26
It will be.
Mhmm.
But I hope they do.
I think it's gonna be quite, an interesting opportunity.
And for the amount we're charging, I feel like it's, like, so achievable that people could make that money back.
You know?
Like Yeah.
Aaron
01:09:37 – 01:09:38
And I I think
Aaron
01:09:39 – 01:09:43
I I think we could sell out.
I don't think it'll happen immediately, but I think I think we could sell out.
I
think it's possible.
I think it's possible.
It'll be interesting to figure out the, like, how we wanna do the reads and where we wanna put them and, like, I think, you know, I think it's pretty straightforward, but there could end up being some nuance once we get in there and, actually do it if we have some some feelings on how we wanna how we wanna do that.
But
Aaron
01:10:01 – 01:10:11
Yeah.
I think, I think we should start by doing maybe four or five four or five slots Mhmm.
And split them up.
Aaron
01:10:11 – 01:10:20
do that.
Split them up.
Maybe I don't know.
Maybe, like, two at the beginning, two at the end, but the people at the end would kinda get hosed.
But we could shuffle that because they're doing a month.
Aaron
01:10:20 – 01:10:21
Right?
Right.
Aaron
01:10:21 – 01:10:23
So we could we could have a That's
a nice thing.
Yeah.
As they can they can rotate so you're not always in one slot.
Aaron
01:10:27 – 01:10:39
I also think it could be we're we're pretty good about doing segments.
Like, we we Yeah.
We don't just wander the whole time.
So we could do them as interstitials between between segments.
You know?
We could just have a segment that's to the we could just have it planned where this is our read after this thing or whatever.
At some point, I don't think it's being built this way, but we could also even I mean, it would make sense in other podcasts to do this, which is there's a different charge of you're charged a different amount if you wanna be at the start of the show versus the middle or whatever.
Yeah.
I don't think for the beginning, we need to get that granular with it.
But,
Aaron
01:11:03 – 01:11:04
No.
I think as long as we shuffle,
it should be it should be Yeah.
Aaron
01:11:07 – 01:11:07
Fine.
Yep.
And, yeah, I think maybe we start with, like, four or five slots or something and see how that goes.
There should be, you know, quick reads, and I think people will it'll be content that people will consume if you hate that word.
I think it will actually be useful to the listeners, which is great.
Mhmm.
Aaron
01:11:30 – 01:11:34
I'm excited.
I think even even as a listener, I think this is a great idea.
Well, also, because it'd be cool because I you don't really hear it on a lot of other podcasts.
Like, everybody's just locked in because they're part of the bigger podcasts are all part of these bigger services.
Part of these networks.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Networks and things where it's like, they're just going out and selling minute long spots because that's what the whole structure is.
And, they're, you know, obviously, you have, like, auto ad injection now, dynamic ad injection, and all that stuff on bigger shows.
So I think you don't hear a lot of different nobody's, like, pushing anything forward.
Kinda it's like we they've all locked in on this, and they're just doing it, and that's what it is.
So I think it's gonna be kinda interesting in that regard too to see if people like it, what the feedback is, if the sponsors like it.
Yeah.
So that'll be interesting.
Aaron
01:12:19 – 01:12:21
It's gonna be great.
I'm so excited.
I'm excited.
I'm excited.
Hopefully, the self-service part works.
That'll be nice.
Aaron
01:12:26 – 01:12:48
It also it also has the opportunity it it has the opportunity to hit, a little bit wider media.
Like, this this idea is just a spectacle unto itself that you can just come on and buy your own spot, and you don't ever have to talk to us, and you put in the 250 characters or whatever it is.
Aaron
01:12:48 – 01:12:57
I think it has and we should try to leverage this.
It has the opportunity to hit, news media, thought leaders, that sort of thing.
Let's get on.
We need to be on Squawk Box where we talked about this or something like that.
Aaron
01:13:01 – 01:13:04
Yeah.
I don't know what that is, but, yeah, I agree.
That sounds awesome.
Hey, maybe someday.
It's a platform.
Platforms some way.
We're rolling out.
Aaron
01:13:10 – 01:13:11
I know.
Complete the vision Adam Martin had eight years ago to do this
Aaron
01:13:14 – 01:13:15
That's right.
Same thing, but he never actually did it.
Yeah.
We'll see.
That would be cool.
I mean, definitely, I think it'd be cool if we have, other podcasts in our own circles that end up maybe wanting to use this this thing or something like that.
Possibility there as well once we work out some kinks to, do something like that too.
Aaron
01:13:33 – 01:13:33
So Mhmm.
That'd be cool.
So, yeah, that's the update.
Next week, I think so if you're if you're looking to sponsor the show, be ready.
We'll probably be tweeting and posting and all that stuff once the
Aaron
01:13:43 – 01:13:45
platform is ready.
Get those credit cards out.
Hopefully, by next, by next show.
But we'll see if that doesn't happen, I'm sure, by the show after.
So pretty soon here, you'll be able to do that, and I think that'll be pretty sweet.
Aaron
01:13:58 – 01:14:03
Yep.
I agree.
Alright.
Have I told you about the what time is it game?
Aaron
01:14:05 – 01:14:06
Well, it's kinda all in the name.
Showtime?
Is it Showtime?
Aaron
01:14:07 – 01:14:09
No.
No.
No.
No.
It's just it's just a game.
Aaron
01:14:10 – 01:14:31
It's not a game.
It's it's just a game where if Jennifer and I are sitting around for a while, it's like we're, you know, on this case, we're leaving a friend's birthday party or, like, we've just finished watching an episode and eating dinner, she'll one of us, actually, we both do it.
She'll say, don't look.
What time do you think it is?
And that's the whole game.
Aaron
01:14:31 – 01:14:31
That's the whole game.
Aaron
01:14:32 – 01:14:34
Great game.
Great game.
So last night
Aaron
01:14:35 – 01:14:39
I first of all, I encourage you to to all play this with
Aaron
01:14:40 – 01:14:50
They're gonna think you're insane, but it's gonna catch on because they're gonna you're gonna say, don't look.
What time do you think it is?
And they're gonna say, 08:42.
And you're gonna guess, and then you're gonna look in this 08:15.
Everybody's gonna be like, wow.
Aaron
01:14:50 – 01:14:56
That's crazy.
So a corollary to what time is it is how old are they?
Aaron
01:14:57 – 01:15:11
So we played how old are they last night.
We're watching, we we watch SNL weekend update every week.
Mhmm.
That's the only part we watch, but just that part truly.
But last night, Chris Rock was the or I guess Saturday night.
Aaron
01:15:11 – 01:15:30
Chris Rock was the host.
And I thought, I haven't seen Chris Rock in forever since, you know, I was a kid.
And I don't I don't follow him, but I thought, I wonder what he's up to.
And so we watched the opening monologue, and we played how old is he?
And so how old do you do you know how old Chris Rock is?
I I don't I don't know exactly.
No.
Alright.
Aaron
01:15:32 – 01:15:35
We're gonna play.
Yeah.
We're gonna play.
How old
Aaron
01:15:36 – 01:15:36
It's Chris Rock.
Time.
I'm gonna say Chris Rock is, 63.
Aaron
01:15:42 – 01:15:43
50 nine.
Aaron
01:15:46 – 01:15:47
was I got it.
I got it.
Aaron
01:15:48 – 01:15:50
Dead on.
Wow.
Aaron
01:15:51 – 01:16:01
'59.
I think Jennifer said '61.
But '59.
So then we were fast forwarding as we do, and, Adam Sandler popped up in one of the sketches.
Love that.
Aaron
01:16:01 – 01:16:03
And we played again.
How old?
Alright.
Adam Sandler, I think, I think he's 60 or 62.
Aaron
01:16:07 – 01:16:09
You think he's 60?
Aaron
01:16:11 – 01:16:14
50 eight.
Adam Sandler.
Aaron
01:16:14 – 01:16:17
Adam Sandler is 58.
Let me just verify.
Aaron
01:16:17 – 01:16:21
four guesses.
Account.
Chris Rock is 59.
Alright.
Yep.
Aaron
01:16:22 – 01:16:24
Got it.
Crazy.
How can these guys be 60?
Aaron
01:16:26 – 01:16:28
I know.
That's not great for us.
So crazy, man.
I love Chris Rock.
Chris Rock's the little run he went on, like, in, I guess was it probably, like, mid to late nineties and maybe early two thousands where he had those HBO specials?
Mhmm.
Those, like, two or three of the first HBO special he did are still probably the greatest comedy specials ever.
There's just, like, so many great lines.
It's just, it's just magic.
Perfect.
Aaron
01:16:47 – 01:16:51
I'm trying to remember what movies he was in when I was a kid.
I never loved him in the movies.
Like, I can't say I like any Chris Rock movies, but the stand up is all all time classic stand up.
Aaron
01:16:59 – 01:17:00
There there's has
to have been one movies.
It's gotta be one of the
Aaron
01:17:03 – 01:17:05
one that I'm thinking of that, like, I
remember in the hood.
That was the first movie he was in way back early nineties.
So then he went obviously in Moyer.
All his stuff is kinda mostly weirdo comedy stuff.
But it's all, like, kinda cheap.
I don't know.
It's not my favorite.
Aaron
01:17:18 – 01:17:21
I IMDB is unusable.
It's just unused
lunch.
One I just want to see Wikipedia for that.
Weekly because they usually have a pretty good
Aaron
01:17:28 – 01:17:30
Chris Rock filmography.
Here we go.
Aaron
01:17:31 – 01:17:39
Alright.
So we would have been I probably would have been thinking mid nineties.
Beverly Hills ninja.
That's probably what I'm thinking of.
He was in Beverly Hills top two.
Aaron
01:17:43 – 01:17:46
Definitely.
And lethal weapon four.
Yeah.
But he
wasn't in boy in the hood.
He was in New Jack City.
That's what he was in.
Aaron
01:17:49 – 01:17:59
Doctor Doolittle.
These are these are, I think, specifically, Beverly Hills Ninja came out in '97, so I would have been eight years old and thought it was probably the funniest thing
in the world.
I didn't even know that this was a a movie.
Aaron
01:18:03 – 01:18:05
I think it's Chris Farley too.
I've literally only heard of, like, half the movie he's ever been in.
Yeah.
Oh, he was in AI?
Oh, no.
That's a different thing.
No.
It is AI.
Steven Spielberg AI.
I forgot.
I guess he's just a he's a voice.
Aaron
01:18:21 – 01:18:23
He's in Paw Patrol.
Dude's getting paid.
A gas guard.
You know, like, man, my gas guard is fine.
Aaron
01:18:27 – 01:18:34
Anyway, what time is it, and how old are they?
Great games.
Great games.
Highly encourage everyone to play.
What time is it?
How old are they?
He's in the Paw Patrol movie.
Oh, man.
He was on, he was in an episode of Miami Vice, 1987.
Oh, yeah.
He had his own show there for a while.
Oh, man.
These Chris Rock specials.
Yeah.
Nineteen ninety nine.
Aaron
01:18:48 – 01:18:54
don't think I've ever seen Chris Rock special.
Man, Chris seen Beverly Hills Ninja.
Oh my god.
The the the you gotta see the comedy specials are, like, they're up there for me with, like, the Godfather in terms of, like, the absurd haven't
Aaron
01:19:04 – 01:19:04
seen them.
The amount of life advice that you can take out of a Chris Rock special to, like, improve yourself off the charts.
Aaron
01:19:12 – 01:19:15
Oh, now now now you're speaking my language.
I could get behind that.
Yeah.
You gotta check these out.
Like, the the early ones, are so, so good.
Yeah.
Bigger and Blacker.
Bring the Pain.
That, I think, is the first one.
Bring the Pain is super good.
Aaron
01:19:30 – 01:19:41
Not a big comedy special guy.
Oh, gosh.
Just just a little just a little let's see.
I've seen Seinfeld, Nate Bargazzi, Jim Gaffigan.
I've watched all those specials.
Aaron
01:19:42 – 01:19:51
Ellen DeGeneres' I think here and now, which is an older one, I think.
I've never seen that.
So funny.
So so freaking funny.
But those are the only ones I've really watched.
I've seen Seinfeld live two or three times.
I've seen, Chris Rock live, but the HBO one
Aaron
01:19:59 – 01:20:03
Live.
I've only seen Seinfeld and Jim Gaffigan.
Okay.
I do like a live comedy show.
It's got a cool vibe.
I wish I did it more.
I should I should try to do more of those.
Seinfeld is good live, but he's not as good, I would say.
He's not as good as the show to me.
I agree.
The show is funnier than him live.
Yeah.
Aaron
01:20:19 – 01:20:20
I agree.
Yeah.
Alright.
We gotta wrap on
Aaron
01:20:23 – 01:20:27
we gotta we gotta wrap on one other thing.
You're in the Northeast.
Right?
Aaron
01:20:27 – 01:20:33
I don't know much about geography, but you're in the Northeast.
Mhmm.
What's going on with the drones?
Man, the drones.
My Jamie saw a drone.
Last good thing.
Aaron
01:20:37 – 01:20:40
Bad guys?
Funny guys?
Silly guys?
Aaron
01:20:41 – 01:20:41
Their guys.
I love how the government has no idea what's going on.
They're like, oh, no.
Aaron
01:20:44 – 01:20:45
The thing.
Aaron
01:20:45 – 01:20:46
We you.
How do you know it's not gonna hurt me?
Because, like,
Aaron
01:20:48 – 01:20:48
you don't
Aaron
01:20:49 – 01:20:57
Part is the government is like, don't worry about it.
But, also, like, I can't exactly tell you what it is.
Aaron
01:20:58 – 01:21:00
That's the part that's not great to me.
Yeah.
But then, you know, what's so weird now too is it's like, who knows how much of it's just even BS in the sense of, like, I don't think it's made up that people are seeing it, but that once there's, like once it becomes a story and maybe it's just, like, more people flying a normal drone or whatever.
Right.
There's some whatever.
Who knows what it was?
Right?
But then it starts to take hold, and now you have every crackpot in the world who owns a drone just flying drones around all day.
Aaron
01:21:22 – 01:21:25
So now it's like Ken Wheeler.
Do you follow him on Twitter?
On Twitter, I haven't I haven't seen him what he's up to because I haven't been on Twitter too much.
Aaron
01:21:29 – 01:21:38
You know, I asked what's the deal with the drones, and people replied, it's Ken Wheeler.
And I was like, what what are you guys talking about?
So I clicked through and went over to his Yeah.
Page, and he lives in New Jersey.
Aaron
01:21:39 – 01:21:45
And he has a video of himself flying a drone, and it says There you go.
Trolling in real life, LOL.
And he's just flying a drone over people's
Aaron
01:21:46 – 01:21:47
this sucks.
Come on, man.
So is it even a thing?
You know what I mean?
And there's, like, a 90% chance it's nothing.
And it's just like but the story got rolling because somebody saw a weird drone in a spot they didn't expect.
And now every lunatic in New Jersey is flying their drone, and that's that's all.
Aaron
01:22:01 – 01:22:04
New Jersey is just lunatics.
And so there's probably
Aaron
01:22:05 – 01:22:06
of drones out there.
Yeah.
I mean, to be honest with you, that's that's pretty accurate.
New Jersey is still lacking of a place.
Not everybody there is totally normal.
It's a little
Aaron
01:22:13 – 01:22:16
Not not anybody there.
Objectively,
Aaron
01:22:17 – 01:22:40
crazy.
Oh, true.
But the thing the thing that is confusing to me Yeah.
Is, so I've I've seen a few videos on it looks like they're from TikTok, but they've been reposted to Reddit.
And it looks like when a drone goes down, all the other drones swarm over to where the drone was.
Aaron
01:22:40 – 01:22:54
And so I've seen one video of that and one video of one of the drones getting hit by, like, one of those high powered green lasers.
And so somebody it's New Jersey.
And so, you know, somebody's somebody's hitting it with a green laser.
Aaron
01:22:55 – 01:23:03
And then, out of nowhere, like, 15 other drones, like, come out of the sky down to where that green laser drone was.
Seems like it's just gotta be made for TikTok, though.
No.
You think it's a real document of an actual event, or is this just Blair Witch
Aaron
01:23:10 – 01:23:14
on TV?
Could have been just a, like, totally falsified video.
That's that's very possible.
Not false, like, CGI, but just, like, yeah.
I just
Aaron
01:23:19 – 01:23:22
Like, 16 friends got together and, like, let's do something hysterical.
Aaron
01:23:23 – 01:23:25
Maybe.
Maybe.
I don't know.
It's very Is
it just a regular Joan then?
So it's just a regular looking drone because people seem to think they're very large.
But people are very large.
Spatial relations.
You know what I mean?
Especially if it's at night.
Like, who knows how big this thing is?
Like, maybe it's just low.
So you think it's bigger than it is, but it's hard to tell because it's nighttime or whatever.
Aaron
01:23:40 – 01:23:42
Right.
I don't know.
I don't know.
This is all ties into me.
All this feels a lot like, a couple points in my life where you realize that, like, the world is, like, not what you thought it was.
And, like, you know, like, the first time you know, it's like doctors aren't actually special people.
They're just normal people.
That's terrible.
Similar to this was, like, 09/11.
I remember living through nine eleven and being like, great.
There's, like, nothing that can shoot down a plane.
Like, no.
There's, like, nothing over the whole United States.
There's no combat aircraft that are patrolling that can shoot anything down.
They're all unarmed, and there basically is nothing even in there at all.
So it's like, you just assume that there's, like, radars and planes and missiles and things defending the country.
There's nothing defending the country.
There's nothing up there.
Like, now there is a little bit more since 09:11, but even then, I think it's mostly just, like, around Washington, DC and New York and stuff.
Aaron
01:24:31 – 01:24:36
Whatever that Malaysian airliner plane was that we lost.
You're like, how is this possible?
Right.
How are we
losing airplanes?
Satellites and things.
Yeah.
Like, where did that go?
Like yeah.
Yeah.
So it's like, yeah.
There's drones.
Nobody knows what they are.
Nobody has any way to track them or figure out if they're real or not real or threat or not threats.
Just like, yeah.
It's just stuff floating around maybe if it's even if that's even true or it's just people making TikTok videos.
Who knows?
But then people like people don't like you had the governor there is like, oh, look, it's really just the constellation Orion, but he thinks they're drones.
Like.
Aaron
01:25:04 – 01:25:09
Well, here's the other thing is they're actually looking like for a period of time, they're shutting.
They had to shut down some airports.
Right.
So I'm like military bases.
Aaron
01:25:11 – 01:25:14
Yeah.
The drones are real.
We know that much.
Aaron
01:25:14 – 01:25:20
So we know that there are actually drones because you don't shut down an airport Right.
Because of the constellation Orion.
Aaron
01:25:21 – 01:25:30
So that that much we know.
Now so that leaves open the question or the, possibility that it's just a bunch of it's just a bunch of New Jersey dorks that are like
Aaron
01:25:31 – 01:25:46
was on Reddit or four Chan, and now there's a thing, and so I'm gonna, like, participate in the thing.
That is that is possible.
Maybe that is the most most likely.
I think the second the least likely is nonhuman intelligence.
I I think it's the least likely that it's aliens.
Aaron
01:25:46 – 01:25:52
None of my deeply held beliefs preclude aliens, but I just don't think this this is not how they would show up in my opinion.
Yeah.
Some of that's aliens.
Jersey.
Come on.
Aaron
01:25:55 – 01:26:04
They're not going to New Jersey.
Come on.
Yeah.
You guys know everything, and you chose New Jersey.
I hope none of our listeners live in New Jersey because they're catching a lot of stories.
Aaron
01:26:05 – 01:26:32
I think besides being besides just being a bunch of rabble rousers, I think the second most likely explanation that I've seen on the Internet is, they're trying to detect some sort of radiation that is only visible at night or more more visible at night.
And so these drones are somebody lost a nuke or there's a leak somewhere, and so they're looking for they're looking for something like that.
That seems reasonable to me.
It's not reasonable.
Because they have
Aaron
01:26:34 – 01:26:35
planes totally reasonable.
Do that.
Why there's a plane.
They have all kinds of planes to track, like, nukes and stuff like that.
I think they have a bunch of drones.
Aaron
01:26:41 – 01:26:43
No.
That seems reasonable to me.
Nah.
That's not reasonable to me.
I think more reasonable along those roughly same lines is something like it's just the Russians just fucking with us.
And, like, it's like, you know, there's been all these attacks on, industrial facilities in Europe Mhmm.
Where, like, you know, they're, you know, starting fires.
You know, miss mysterious fires at, like, arms plants all throughout Europe.
And so is this just a, like, hey.
Like, we could fly a bunch of drones in your airspace, and one of them could have a nuke on them, or one of them could have poison gas, one of them could have anything
Aaron
01:27:13 – 01:27:13
on it.
And we're just looking to do a little bit.
Aaron
01:27:15 – 01:27:27
Of provocation of a foreign country flying drones over our sovereign airspace.
That is incredibly stupid and incredibly dangerous.
If you're the Russians, you're like, yeah.
We're gonna I'm not there
Aaron
01:27:29 – 01:27:30
already, but That's crazy.
I don't know.
But desperate people do desperate things.
Right?
Aaron
01:27:34 – 01:27:36
Putin is crazy.
That is that is
true.
Yeah.
I thought you're dealing with, like, a totally rational individual.
Aaron
01:27:39 – 01:27:40
That is true.
He's not a reasonable actor.
He thought he was gonna drive into another country.
He couldn't just drive in, and then he's, like, killed half a million of his own people trying to prove that he was right, and this should be his.
Aaron
01:27:50 – 01:27:51
He's not the sharpest tool.
Yeah.
So, like, you know, I mean, he's a tool.
Aaron
01:27:53 – 01:27:54
I don't think he's
Aaron
01:27:57 – 01:28:15
There's another argument that it's a show it's a show of, force from the United States government, but we're not claiming it.
We're not showing, like, to the Chinese because they're always doing their big, drone displays as if they're parades of light, but, really, it's a military show of force.
I don't think Like, we're not we're not taking credit for it.
Terrorizing your own people.
Yeah.
Aaron
01:28:17 – 01:28:18
So teach them
Aaron
01:28:19 – 01:28:26
That's what they say.
This is ours.
That's where instead, we're saying we actually don't know whose it is.
Right.
That doesn't intimidate anybody.
No.
I don't think anybody's intimidated by it.
Like, we can't even control our own airspace.
We have no idea what's going on.
Like, I don't think that's intimidating.
Yeah.
I don't know.
It's still most likely just random normal human or normal humans doing, like, for whatever their own either political reasons or just their own wacky reasons, making this, you know, they bought 10 of these huge drones.
They're just flying them all around possible.
I mean, there's lots of drones out there.
It's like just big industrial drones.
Aaron
01:28:53 – 01:28:54
Obviously, it's a
zillion little drones.
So
Aaron
01:28:57 – 01:28:57
I don't know.
It'd be interesting.
Maybe we'll never know.
It's like DB Cooper.
You know about DB Cooper?
Love DB Cooper.
Aaron
01:29:03 – 01:29:04
Cooper.
DB Cooper.
So I love that kind of thing.
People don't know.
He's, like, this guy who hijacked a plane and stole some money, and they jumped out the plane with a parachute, and they never found him.
So, obviously, everybody thinks they saw oh, I saw D.
B.
Cooper in this gas station in Oregon or whatever.
And, like, so now he probably just died in a tree, but nobody knows for sure.
So he's just out there a lot.
Aaron
01:29:24 – 01:29:26
A few documentaries on DB Cooper.
Yep.
So is it this gonna be that kind of thing?
And in twenty years from now in the history channels, they'll be like, oh, the mass drones in New Jersey of 2024, and we don't know what that was, and that's it.
Aaron
01:29:37 – 01:29:38
I hope so.
Unfortunately, they make a documentary.
Aaron
01:29:40 – 01:29:43
I don't think it's aliens, unfortunately.
I would love for it to be aliens.
Aaron
01:29:44 – 01:29:45
But it seems
like people actually know their drones, so the aliens aren't using drones.
You know?
Aaron
01:29:49 – 01:29:54
No.
Probably not.
Although, you know, what do I know about aliens?
Not very much.
Aaron
01:29:55 – 01:29:56
Maybe it's
just the leading presence of their, like they send out the drones from the mother ship, and, that'd be something.
Aaron
01:30:04 – 01:30:09
Maybe maybe they traveled through interstellar space, got here, and they're like, woah.
Drones.
Those are cool.
Let's do that.
We'll do that.
Those.
We'll adopt those.
Aaron
01:30:11 – 01:30:14
Show up with their their drones.
Yeah.
That could be.
That could be.
Aaron
01:30:16 – 01:30:18
Well, dear listener, if you know what the drones are
Aaron
01:30:18 – 01:30:20
know because I'm very, very curious.
It's
Give us your drone.
Curiosity
Aaron
01:30:22 – 01:30:27
like l k 99.
I wanna believe I wanna believe there's something interesting going on.
I have to say this has not peaked my interest as much as, like, that did or some of these other things.
I I can't get into this because I feel like it's just, like, it's gonna be an unsatisfying conclusion.
Aaron
01:30:36 – 01:30:37
It's just gonna be hooligans.
Yeah.
It's just gonna be something like whatever.
Even if it's the Russians, like, whatever.
It's the Russians
Aaron
01:30:42 – 01:30:46
are flying through.
I think you're downplaying what a big deal it would be if it was the Russians.
All kinds of stuff in the past years.
Nothing else has been a big deal.
Is this a big deal?
I don't know.
Aaron
01:30:51 – 01:30:51
I feel Yes.
Because this is Everything's not a big deal.
Everything being not a since we've made none of these other provocations a big deal, they're obviously always just gonna keep pushing the boundaries.
Right?
Like, when will we ever hit something that is a big deal?
Right?
Aaron
01:31:04 – 01:31:07
Flying drones over sovereign airspace is a big deal.
Maybe it is.
Maybe it isn't.
I don't know.
China flew that balloon over.
That was
Aaron
01:31:11 – 01:31:12
Did they, though?
Yeah.
They flew and the air force shot it down.
Remember that?
It was, like, last year.
Aaron
01:31:16 – 01:31:19
Oh, I remember that.
I didn't know we we knew definitively that it was China.
I think the pretty I think it's definitively Chinese.
I don't know if it was definitively, like, is it a spy satellite or is it a Mhmm.
Balloon or is it weather or whatever?
You know?
But it's a thing.
And even this is like, it's been a thing even more you know, they've known that they're flying them over, but they weren't bothering to shoot them down.
And then the public found out, and then they were like, okay.
We'll shoot it down because, like, whatever
Aaron
01:31:40 – 01:31:40
people are
freaking out.
But, like, I don't it wasn't even, like, an unknown thing because that's, like, just a big thing you could see on radar for a pie.
But
Aaron
01:31:47 – 01:31:53
Imagine being a fighter pilot that's just, like, chilling and you finally get scrambled to go shoot something out of the sky.
How much fun would that be?
You're probably pretty excited about that.
Aaron
01:31:55 – 01:32:00
Yeah.
That really Even if it is a little balloon, that's still that's pretty awesome.
Target.
Yeah.
That's real programming there.
Making a missile, shoot down a balloon.
That'd be
Aaron
01:32:05 – 01:32:08
three That would be high stakes stuff.
How do you do that?
How do you do that reliably?
What's your test suite like on that?
Oh, you know?
Aaron
01:32:11 – 01:32:21
I don't know, but you're using technology from forty years ago.
You are.
Because you can't you can't be risking you can't be risking, you know, node modules getting too big or something.
You're using tools
to testing.
Like, is there testing frameworks for Fortran or whatever you use to write this stuff or just c?
I don't know.
I don't know.
Don't know how any of that works.
Now there is a whole world where they're using terminal apps.
Well, they're trying to get out of the terminal apps.
Even there, you know, it's like all the modern airplanes have, like, the big iPad looking things now with, like, charts and graphs and stuff.
But those old fighter planes had the more, like, just a green terminal looking screen.
Aaron
01:32:45 – 01:32:54
One other point I had on terminal apps is grocery store, interfaces are all terminal, like, the people at the cash registers and that kind of stuff.
Aaron
01:32:54 – 01:33:11
Yeah.
Because they're so freaking fast.
That's that's, like, that's one of the big pros of terminals is it's just incredibly fast.
And so you ever, like, peek around to whoever's scanning your food and you see the big old goofy screen with just text, it's like
Aaron
01:33:11 – 01:33:13
Yep.
There's a reason.
It could be.
I don't know if they're all terminals.
Like, at Target, I think it's like a touch screen thing.
But I know what you're saying.
Aaron
01:33:18 – 01:33:19
Yeah.
I know
what you're saying.
Yeah.
There was a those terminal, like, interfaces.
I mean, that's what I think I told the story on here, but, like, HelpSpot was born from, like, we had to use a help desk app that was only in the mainframe terminal.
Yep.
And it couldn't accept email, and you couldn't paste into it.
It's like, all these bad terminal things.
That was, like, an actual terminal.
Obviously, what we're talking about on a Mac is not a true a terminal in the true well, it sort of is when you're connected to a remote machine.
I guess you mean you're welcome.
It's sort of a terminal.
I don't know how you describe that.
You could paste that.
Aaron
01:33:46 – 01:33:51
I don't know what a terminal is.
I don't know what a shell is.
I'm just I'm just here to hang.
Yeah.
It's true.
And some of this stuff has gotten a little fuzzier, I think, now that there's, like, with the modern state of computers.
But, anyway, yeah, terminal app's bad.
See that you're just making my point here.
Terminal app's bad.
But No.
Aaron
01:34:03 – 01:34:06
was making the point terminal app's good.
But thanks for listening.
Y'all tune in next
next time.
Alright.
Thanks everybody.
Follow us mostly technical.com at mostly tech pod on Twitter, mostly technical.com and blue sky, mostly technical podcast at g mail dot com, which I'm fully caught up on all the emails.
So send me a fresh batch of emails that I can ignore for a month, and then I will get back to them all after that.
Aaron
01:34:28 – 01:34:29
Perfect.
Aaron
01:34:30 – 01:34:31
See you.