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February 6, 2020 • 41 mins
Ring introduces a Control Center for easier management of privacy settings; Apple Watch tips and tricks; Google Maps turns 15; Google Photos lets strangers download other users' videos by accident.Listeners ask about switching to a new wireless home internet provider, Apple Watch bands, the difference between Libby and Overdrive and creating ringtones for the iPhone.Follow Rich DeMurohttps://www.instagram.com/richontech/Follow Producer Meghanhttps://twitter.com/producermeghanRing Control Centerhttps://richontech.tv/2020/02/quick-tips/ring-privacy-dashboard-issues-concerns-adjust-settings/Apple Watch Trade Inhttps://ww.9to5mac.com/2020/02/03/apple-bumps-apple-watch-trade-in-values/#Apple Watch Tipshttps://www.instagram.com/p/B8MQHTkljOO/Google Maps 15https://www.blog.google/products/maps/maps-15th-birthdayGoogle Photos Mistakehttps://mashable.com/article/google-photos-videos-glitch/Starry Internethttps://starry.com/internetWander Internethttps://www.wander.net/Libby Apphttps://www.overdrive.com/apps/libby/Ringtones for iPhonehttps://softorino.com/iringgSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
Ring adds new security settings you should check right now.
After the podcast, Google Photos has a major oops, plus
some Apple Watch tips and tricks. What's going on? This
is the Rich on Tech podcast where I talk about
the tech stuff I think you should know about. It's
also the place where I answer the questions that you
send me. My name is rich Dimiro, the tech reporter

(00:30):
at KATLA Channel five in Los Angeles. Joining me is
producer Megan, who just finished watching the Taylor Swift documentary.
What's up? Megan?

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Just this morning? Not much? Did you watch it?

Speaker 1 (00:42):
I watched twenty minutes of it, so I will try to.
We've been trying to finish it. Yeah, but I liked
it for the twenty minutes that we watched. So I'm
still trying to get through the Morning Show season one.
It takes me a while to get through things. So
it usually takes me two nights, two to three nights
for a movie, yeah, TV series maybe a year and

(01:02):
then five years. Yeah, it's a while. Book maybe books
are actually pretty quick, Yeah, usually like a month, because
I that's that's my priority. I read and I love reading,
especially now with Libby, the app that gives me the
free books. So I think we talked about that on
the podcast, right Libby, we did right?

Speaker 2 (01:19):
Yeah, last week? I think we did.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
Yeah, did we? I think we did well. Anyway, if
you don't have it, download the app Libby so you
can get free books for your kindle. Have you charged
your kindle since we talked about that, because I know
you let it go totally dead for like a couple
of years.

Speaker 3 (01:34):
You know, I actually bought a kindle because of Libby.
I didn't have a kindle before. Oh, you gave me
an old kindle. I gave it to my dad, and
then I bought myself a new Kindle when you told
me about Libby, because I was like, I don't want
to spend money on books anymore.

Speaker 2 (01:48):
Why not just yeah, free the local library. So yeah,
I've been loving it.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
So you've got you've gotten one delivered to the iPad
or the I have like eight books on the kindle,
pretty easy, and it's it's pretty amazing, and I, you know,
I go back and forth about the whole you know,
reading on this on the tablet versus reading on the
printed page. For a while, I was going all books,
but I realized buying the latest best sellers are very expensive,

(02:15):
and I love supporting artists and this and that I
wrote a book, and I love that people you know,
paid me to you know, get my book. But I
also offered it for free a lot of different ways.
So I think there's something for everyone.

Speaker 2 (02:26):
Well, I like.

Speaker 3 (02:27):
The idea of maybe trying starting it on on Libby,
on your kindle, like getting a book there, and then
let's say you're like so into it and you're like,
I love this book, I want to have it.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Then you can buy it.

Speaker 1 (02:38):
And nobody's doing that, but I would maybe I would test.
It's test books, testing books. That's interesting. But maybe if
you love an author, it all depends too. Maybe you're
going on vacation, you want that physical books that you
can read it by the pool, whatever it may be. Anyway,
well I'm glad you're reading again. Let's get to the
big story of the week. Ring has a whole bunch

(03:01):
of new controls inside their app. They are calling it
the Control Center, and if you have a Ring device,
you should take a look at this immediately. Because Ring's
been in the news for a lot of stuff, a
lot of it has been kind of overblown, but at
the same time, this is a device that is on
a lot of homes, and this is a company that

(03:22):
needs to step up when it comes to letting the
average person make sure that their stuff is secured. So,
no matter what, we had that whole big thing where
the people were hacking into the rings or we call
it hacking, but realistically people are using very weak passwords,
they weren't protecting their device very much and other people
were able to get into those. Now they're saying that
they have this new control center and help you kind

(03:43):
of see all this stuff in one place, and here's
the things that you need to look at. Number one,
you can look and see if you have two factor
authentication enabled for your Ring account, which you should. Ring
is outside your front door. You might have one inside
your house. It's a look into your personal so you
want to have this secured in a big way. Two
factor authentication is kind of the best thing we have

(04:05):
right now. So the control center will tell you if
that's enabled, if it's not, turn it on. Second thing,
you can see all of the devices and the third
party services that are authorized to see your Ring account.
Let me give you an example. Let's say you had
an old Android phone and you upgrade it to an
iPhone last year. That old Android phone might still be

(04:26):
logged into your account on Ring and even if you
have it in a drawer somewhere. Probably not the biggest,
biggest deal, but it's still an open kind of pathway
into your account that you want to close. So you
can go through and actually remove all the devices that
are on your account. And for me, that was about
eight pages of devices from over the years. I've had

(04:47):
a RING for five years now, so you have like
forty it was. Yeah, it test phones all the time,
so I'm always logging in. Yeah, and of course Ring
I want to see what's going on, so I removed
all the old phone. The only thing I don't like
about this is you can't remove them one by one.
You have to remove them all, which is fine, you
just start fresh, and then once you start fresh, you

(05:08):
have to log in on your main phones again. Okay.
It's also good. If you ever gave someone access to
your account and you kind of forgot about that, they
can still be looking in, so good get rid of them. Yeah.
The way they want you to share access to your
account is with a process called shared Users. So, Megan,
let's say I was going on vacation. I said, hey,
can you take a look at you know, just keep
a watch on my house, and I gave you access

(05:29):
to my account. Normally, I would log in on the
app on your phone and be like, okay, cool, Well,
now you can do something called shared users. You could
always do this for a while, but that's the way
you want to do it. Got so that way it's
more controlled and I can take away your privileges from
my end without going onto your phone and logging in, right, okay.
Now the big one is something called video request notifications.

(05:52):
This is something you may or may not understand or
even be aware of when it comes to RING, but
they work with law enforcement in very arious places across
the US so that law enforcement can say, hey, you
know what, we had a robbery on Main Street, and
do you mind pinging all those cameras around Main Street
and asking them if they would give us their video

(06:13):
so we can take a look and see if we
get a photo of the person, the perpetrator, or the
car or the license plate. And so RING will ping
people on Main Street and say hey, would you mind
sharing your video with the police, and they would go
and they would grab your video off the account from
a certain period of time. Let's say it was from
one am to two am.

Speaker 2 (06:31):
If you let them.

Speaker 1 (06:32):
If you let them, you would give them that permission. Well,
in the past you had to just kind of wait
for the police to ask you for this. Now you
can say, you know what, I don't even want the
police to I'm not even in the running for this.
Just take me out of the running. Just imagine I
don't have a ring video doorbell. Don't even tell the
police I do. So that way you can turn this off.
This is called video request notifications. You can opt out

(06:55):
of that now, so you can disable that.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
And that's because it's like, I don't want to.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
Do what's that? Yeah, you just don't. Maybe you don't
trust the police, Maybe you don't trust the society, you're
an anarchist, you don't like the government. Whatever it is,
I don't know, but there's reasons. But they're giving you
that ability. I personally left it on if something happened
outside my house and I can help with something, fine.
Now here's when it comes to be a problem. It's

(07:22):
I mean, it's just this weird thing where you're willing
to help unless it's something related to you.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
Perhaps so let's say your neighbor's house, yeah.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
Or anything, and all of a sudden they're like, hey,
can we get and you're like, oh wait, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.

Speaker 2 (07:36):
I can't show you what happened between one am.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Yeah, I'm not showing you that, okay. So it's interesting.
It's one of these things where it's good to have
the ability to turn it on or off. I would
hope that people would leave it on because it's probably
in the greater good. But there's also this idea of
are we building a surveillance society? Right?

Speaker 3 (07:56):
Unknowingly, it reminds me of the surveillance camera and cars everywhere.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
They're everywhere now, well.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
The company we did like two companies last year that
do that.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
You have you have a camera in your car.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
I have a a dash cam.

Speaker 2 (08:13):
Right and you're talking about something with you know, if
you get to.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
An accident, yeh, can that video be subpoena?

Speaker 2 (08:19):
I mean, it's it's crazy.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
The idea that we have so many cameras everywhere is
just becoming more of reality. Like, we have to figure
out how to deal with all this. There's no easy
there's no easy solution. Regan By the way, if you
want to look at your ring stuff on my website,
rich on Tech dot TV. I do have a blog
post where I kind of laid out all those things
I just talked about and explain how to change those

(08:41):
features and you know, do whatever you need to do
to make them work for you.

Speaker 2 (08:45):
Cool. I'm going to check it out. Okay.

Speaker 3 (08:47):
So this first question comes from Joe, and Joe wrote
on Rich's Facebook, which is Facebook dot dot com slash
rich on Tech. Joe writes, I wanted to get your
opinion on a new internet provider called Story. Are you
familiar with this? We just got it installed today and
so far it's going great.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
I have heard of Story, and this is a wireless
internet provider, kind of an alternative to the typical internet providers,
which are your cable company and your phone company. But
we are seeing more of these wireless providers come along,
which is a good thing for customers or consumers. I
guess I should say. This is fifty dollars a month
for two hundred megabits of service. And what they're doing

(09:29):
is they have kind of a on one big building
they have like an antenna and then they'll have a
small antenna that they put in your house, like this
little wireless box, a router kind of thing, router slash modem,
and that receives a signal from the big antenna that
they put up. So the main downside of this is
really where it's available. Okay, So if it's available in
your area, then by all means check it out, and

(09:52):
you should go to Starre dot com and see pop
in your address and see if it's available. This can
help you bypass the cable companies because it's go to
be a little bit cheaper. Now. I wish it was
a lot cheaper. For example, I pay seventy dollars a
month for Spectrum, which is two hundred megabits per second,
and that's seventy dollars. This is fifty for maybe about

(10:13):
the same speed. So it would be nice if it
was way cheaper, like thirty twenty dollars a month. It's
kind of a lot. It's not that much to have
you switch because it's a pain to switch.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
Yeah, so if I was.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
Saving forty a month or fifty a month, sure, but
twenty a month is kind of like I'll get to that.
But I do think this is cool and it's available
according to their website in La San Francisco, Boston, New
York City, and Denver. So go to Star dot com.
See the other one that's available in LA is called
wander Wa n Oh gosh, is it w I think

(10:49):
it's w A N d R. I think they leave
out the e, W A and d R. Let me see,
hold on, let me get it. It is called wander
Wa n d ER. So if you're in LA, check
out wander really Santa Monica. That's kind of where they're available.
Oh well, that's their website. Wow, okay, I don't like websites.

(11:12):
I have AutoPlay wander dot net. So if you want
to check it out now, they are twenty five dollars
a month.

Speaker 2 (11:18):
Oh wow, how many.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
That I think is fifty down, But fifty is enough
for most people. Okay, So, but for twenty five dollars
a month, that sounds a lot cheaper than seventy to me.
I'd be like, yeah, I'm checking this.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
So anyway, those are your two alternatives. We're seeing T Mobile.
They have T Mobile ISP, which you can check and
see if they're available in your area. They're fifty. Verizon
has five G home Internet, which again all these things
are available in very small areas because they have to
put an antenna up in your area with this big service,
and then it services just a small area around an antenna, right,

(11:52):
So that's why it's not everywhere all at once. Let's
talk about kind of the the biggest fear when you
put your stuff in the cloud. What would that be.
Let's say you back up all your pictures to the cloud.
What's your biggest fear with that?

Speaker 2 (12:04):
It getting hacked?

Speaker 1 (12:06):
Yeah, someone else seeing the pictures, so get like just deleted,
deleted or hacked. Yeah, or basically someone else getting access
to these pictures is also kind of up there. Well,
Google Takeout had a little bit of a problem with
Google Photos. Now I love Google Photos, you know, I'm
a big fan, So to me, this really hurts my
heart when I see that this happened with Google Photos.

(12:27):
But some people that try to download their pictures from
Google Photos apparently got some other people's photos mixed in
with theirs. Not just photos, it's actually videos.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
Oh that's so weird.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
Yeah. This happened between November twenty first and twenty fifth.
It was for people that were using Google Takeout, And
if you're not familiar with Google Takeout. Google has this
system where you can download the data that Google has
that you you upload with them. So if you've used
a service, basically any of their services, you can go
to this Google Takeout website and say, hey, I want
an archive all my pictures that I've uploaded in all

(13:01):
my videos, and they will zip that up into an
archive and then let you download it. Now, actually downloading
that is one hundred percent a royal pain because imagine
I've got a terabyte of photos in my Google Photos
or whatever. I have, maybe not that much, but the
reality is to download a file that big, and even
though they break up the files so that they're easier

(13:22):
to download, it's gonna take me a week or two
to download. Yeah, So realistically, I've never done this because
it's too much. We need a better system and Google,
I will say, Google Drive lets you sync to other
devices like a Synology backup or something like eb meeb
dot com is the website for that device that lets

(13:43):
you back up your Google Drive. Google Photos, as far
as I know right now, has no way of letting
you incrementally back them up to another device. So, like
we talked about ebe, remember when that thing first came out,
it's a Wi Fi connected hard drive. When that first
came out, you were able to think your Google Photos
to that ebe. Now you can't do that anymore. Google

(14:04):
Photos kind of cut off everyone all third parties. So
now when you do Google Photos, everything is in Google
Photos and that's it. You can't say, hey, I want
this hard drive to kind of sink all these photos
every night all twenty four to seven so that I
always have a copy of to me.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
Yeah, probably coming out with their own version of easy.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
Something there exactly. That leads me to believe that they
EI are going to do like a marketing thing where
they're going to say, hey, Western Digital or whoever, you're
going to have exclusive rights to letting people sink their
photos to your hard drive. Because think about it, that's
a pretty lucrative business. Yeah, all the people are using
Google Photos, say oh, I want that hard drive so
I can easily have a backup totally say somebody has

(14:41):
to do this. Google has to do this soon, Yeah,
because you don't want to not have your I mean,
Google's not going away anytime soon, but it just it
worries me that my pictures are in a place I
can't easily download.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
I get questions all the time from my family members.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
About where to put their photos, and it's I just
feel like it's becoming an issue. Yeah, all my pictures
are on my computer. My computer is super slow. Now, Like, yep,
that just shouldn't happen. You shouldn't have to put everything
on your desktop computer.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
No, and or if you Yeah, I mean, it's just
people don't really do that anymore. It's all in the cloud. Yeah,
I mean, so you have Google. You know, You've got
Google Photos, You've got Microsoft OneDrive, You've got Amazon Photos,
You've got iCloud. It is very confusing. This entire picture
thing has caused most people to just declare photo bankruptcy,

(15:29):
where I don't even want to deal with it. I'll
just and they're forced to deal with it when they
have to, which is when they get a new phone,
when they get a new computer, when something happens or
something goes wrong. Yeah, and for me, this even happened
to myself. I was looking for a picture of my
kid in the hospital when he was born, and I
couldn't find it. I went to the date of his
birth and nothing was in there in Google Photos. I'm like, whoa,
what I had messed up? I had not backed up

(15:53):
a backup that I thought I backed up, and then
I had to back up and do it all over again. Yeah.
It was really freaked me out. I was like, how
am I going to explain this to my wife?

Speaker 2 (16:03):
Oh no?

Speaker 1 (16:04):
Yeah? So long story short. With the Google Photos stuff,
it probably didn't affect you, And if it did, you
got an email from Google and they are telling you
if you did a takeout export between November twenty first
and November twenty fifth, you should delete it and ask
for a new.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
One because one terabyte.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
You may have other people's stuff in there.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
So did you get your pictures? Oh?

Speaker 1 (16:26):
Pp, other people's photos?

Speaker 2 (16:29):
Did you get your picture?

Speaker 1 (16:30):
I did find them? Yeah, okay, good, But now I'm
worried because I have a lot of random background.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
Do you print any pictures? By the way?

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Sometimes? Okay, sometimes, but very rarely.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
But I love Google Photos because now if you need
to print a picture, you can just search in Google
Photos for whatever you need. Like I'm doing like a
sunset collage and I can just type in sunsets.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
And you know, no, it's such a cool feature for sure.

Speaker 3 (16:52):
This next question comes from Thomas, and if you want
to submit your question, just go to riches site rich
on tech dot tv and hit the contact button to
send your question. So Thomas writes, I heard your segment
on KFI with Handle. What is the difference between Libby
and Overdrive? I have Overdrive on my kindle now and

(17:14):
your explanation of Libby seems to be the same as Overdrive.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
Well, in fact, good question. So, by the way, if
you're in the LA area, I'm on KFI AM six
forty Tuesday mornings at eight am with Bill Handle, Wednesday
mornings at five point twenty with Jennifer Jones Lee. So
what is the difference between overdrive and Libby? Well, Libby
is actually owned by Overdrive. And these are the apps

(17:41):
we're talking about at the beginning of the show that
lets you get free books, and it's not just fair Kindle.
By the way, these let you download. You can read
them inside the app, you can read them on your iPad,
you can read them on your computer. Anywhere where you
can download or access Overdrive or Libby, you have access
to these apps or these books. So the Overdrive app
the original one, and you probably have heard of it.

(18:02):
In fact, a lot of libraries work with Overdrive to
put their digital collections on Overdrive. It's kind of like
every library in America doesn't want to create their own
digital library, so they just say, you know what, we're
gonna let Overdrive handle the heavy lifting, and yes, we
have the collections, but you handle all the rights management,
loading them out, making sure they're collected. Because even though

(18:24):
it's a library book through Overdrive, it's still dealt with
the same way as a physical book. You have to
wait for a copy of it, you get it out
for a certain amount of time, and you have to
give it back at the end of that time. So
Overdrive is just a more thorough version. I think it's
the original one, and it just has everything all in there,
so it even has video. Apparently. Libby is just for

(18:47):
books and just for audiobooks, and it's way simpler and
it helps you sign up for the library card. I
haven't used the Overdrive app. I've only used Libby, but
from what I can see, it seems like they took
everything they learned about Overdrive the ten years or so
that it's been available and just kind of distilled it
down into Libby, which is just simpler, cooler, hip or fresher,
better interface, and just easier to use.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
How did you come across Libby?

Speaker 1 (19:12):
I saw an article about it, and I was like,
this is interesting, because whenever I see an article about
something that seems really cool that I've never heard of,
I'm like, I gotta investigate this.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
So I saw this Libby thing. I'm like, and I
knew you could always get I knew, I always knew
you can get books from your library in digital format,
but it was to me, it just seemed like it
was too tough and too complicated, so I never bothered.
But then when I saw that, I saw the words
Libby and Kindle and I was like, wait a second,
that's interesting. I never thought about that free and free,

(19:41):
and that's when I looked it up. And it's like
after that game over. I've told everyone I know about it,
and I've talked to a lot of people that read
a lot and they knew about it, and so it's
something that's not a secret, but it's really cool.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Yeah, super cool.

Speaker 1 (19:55):
February is Heart month, and if you have your eye
on an Apple Watch, you might want to upgrade because
they are. Apple is giving a little bit of extra
cash for the series two and three, which are perfectly fine.
But if you want the new features of the Apple
Watch five, this might be the time to do it.
Because you're getting one hundred dollars for your old watch

(20:16):
versus you know, versus seventy or sixty. Wow, so you're
getting thirty or forty extra dollars, which when you think
about one hundred, that's that's a big percentage extra. So
what do you get with the Apple Watch Series five
over the two or three? Will you get the compass,
get a larger display, you get a faster processor, you
get the always on display, which I don't necessarily think

(20:38):
you need, but you get the heart readings as well.
So if you're thinking about a new Apple Watch, do
the trade in now. I will tell you. And I
don't think this would happen with your Apple Watch. But
with me. You've probably heard me complain on this podcast
about my computer that I sent in for trade in.
I bought my new computer. They said they're going to
give me six hundred and forty dollars for my old one.
Send it away email two weeks later saying oh, we're

(21:02):
not giving you six forty, we're giving you two thirty
and I said, wait, wait what they said it was bent?
So I was like, okay, send it back. So they
sent it back to me. I got it yesterday. I
finally opened it up and I looked at it. I
was like, where's this bent? Because my computer was perfect.
I was so proud of how perfect. I kept this
computer for three years or two years, whatever I had
it for, and I finally saw a little tiny where

(21:23):
I dropped it on my desk, actually only a couple
of weeks ago before I returned it. Yeah, and the
side corner was just a little bit bent. In long
story short, the computer's fine. So now it's for my kids,
I'm not so I guess my word to the whys
is just beware that when you get the new Apple
Watch and you send your old one in for one hundred,
they could still come back at you and say, now

(21:44):
we're only giving you fifty because there's a scratch on
the screen or whatever. They still reserved that right. Speaking
of the Apple Watch, there are several tips and tricks
that I shared on my Instagram, so I'll share some
of them here. So a couple things. Number One, you
want to squeeze some more battery life out of your watch,
you can use something called power reserve, So you can
swipe up from the bottom, tap the battery percentage, and

(22:05):
then slide the power reserve switch and it turns off
everything except just the time. So if you're on a
long plane flight you just want your watch to last.
Maybe you're on an overnight flight to Tokyo. You want
your watch to last when you land and you're gonna
be hitting the ground running in the morning. Put on
the power reserve. It won't go dead on the flight next. Oh,
if you want to get out of there, you have
to press and hold the side button until the Apple

(22:26):
logo appears. Maybe an app is misbehaving. Did you know
that you can kind of swipe out an app, just
like you can on your iPhone. So press the side button,
find the offending app, and then swipe the app to
the left. That will reveal a red X. Tap it
in their cos This is a really cool one that
I'm not sure a lot of people know. Most of
the time, when you look at your apps on the
Apple Watch, they're arranged in this sort of bubble grid

(22:47):
I call it. It's like really weird. I don't even
know why they chose that, but it's like they're floating around.
It's really weird. Well, I personally like a grid or
a list view. So if you go to your bubble
grid and just kind of press hard on the screen,
it will say, oh, do you want to change the
list view, and then you can change them to list
view and now you can scroll through your apps alphabetically.
And finally, the other one I like, and this is

(23:09):
my favorite. You know that you can find your your
iPhone if you swipe up from the bottom of your
Apple Watch screen and press the little ping button which
looks like an iPhone with some waves rating out radiating
out of it. Well, if you press and hold your
finger on that little button, your phone will flash and ring.
So if you're in a dark room, you can actually

(23:32):
see where your phone is. Oh cool, just kind of fun.
All of those tips and tricks are on my Instagram
at rich on Tech or my Facebook page Facebook dot
com slash.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
Okay, Well, then one more Apple question, Apple Watch.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
What is this the Apple podcast? What we the Apple
bits excel?

Speaker 2 (23:49):
Well, this is an Apple Watch question, so I thought
might as well, Okay, follow your I'm just kidding, I'm
just nice. This next question comes from Greg rich when
you recommend a good Apple Watch case that doesn't get
all fogged up, the one.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
We have is useless Apple Watch case. I've seen people
with cases on their Apple Watch and I never understood it.
And I get it. It's a small little device. You
think you're gonna be working out, You're gonna be doing things,
you know, outdoors. You're gonna scratch it, You're gonna hit
up against the wall. But I've been wearing an Apple
Watch for a long time and I've never had a
problem with it at all. I've never scratched it. I

(24:27):
did drop it on the floor once, on my tile
floor in the bathroom. Is it marble, no, just kidding?
Or is it gold or was that the gold plated floor?
And it did dent the side of it, but it
was like the back that was over here on the side. Yeah.
So I think that is the time when you do
have to worry about it is when your screen hits
a hard ground like that, like from a higher elevation,

(24:50):
like if you put on the countertop and it falls
onto your kitchen floor, that's probably gonna mess up the
screen pretty well. Otherwise, I don't really think you need
a case with your Apple Watch. I feel like it
takes away from the beauty of it, and it's a
device that is meant to be used. It's waterproof, it's fine.
It's gonna be okay in the water for most of
the generations, except I believe the first one. So you're okay. Now,

(25:13):
if you really want one, I'd probably go with a
company like otter Box, or you can go with Spegan.
Those are two companies that make a lot of cases.
I've never tested one.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
I don't even know what that would look like.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
It's just it's big and gummy and rubbery. That's what
it looks like. It looks like kind of a big
gummy rubbery thing on your watch. Like it's kind of
a lot.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
Yeah, especially if you know an Apple Watch can last
like six months in the ocean.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
Yeah, we did a story with that. The guy's Apple
Watch washed up six months later after he lost it
in the ocean, and it was fine. But that said,
I'll give you some of the brands. Catalyst is another one.
Catalyst makes a lot of waterproof cases. Otter Box, Pelican,
they might make a case for the Apple Watch. And
what's the other one. I really like spec but I
don't think they make one for the Apple Watch. Let's see,

(25:58):
maybe they do. Oh, sure enough, they.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Do, they do.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
So I would look at those those places and speaking
if you want something that's kind of cheap. But yes,
Spec Spec makes a candy shell fit, but it's kind
of like it makes your watch a little I don't know. Okay,
but it's twenty bucks. If you feel more comfortable having
that on there, go ahead. Maybe your personal trainer. I've
seen a lot of a lot of the trainers at
my gym when I do one on one personal training

(26:22):
every day. Yeah yeah, twice a day.

Speaker 2 (26:25):
When I'm there once a month.

Speaker 1 (26:26):
Yeah, so uh, I'm totally kidding, by the way about
doing it.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
But not the mars every other day.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
But these trainers, they do have little kind of these
rubber wrappers on their watch because they are bouncing around
weights and all this stuff. So I could see how
that could be a problem.

Speaker 2 (26:42):
Yeah, I wonder what that's like.

Speaker 1 (26:44):
But for me, when I'm just on the peloton, I
don't really have that issue. Yeah again, joking, all these
things are.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
Jet Rich does not have a peloton.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
I don't have a peloton.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
He is a personal training.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
I have that thing where like someone does the workout
for you? Is that a thing? What? No, what's that
thing where you just like put it on your abs
and it's just.

Speaker 2 (27:01):
Like it, like, yeah, I need one of those.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
Do you imagine that? I do believe in the future, though,
they will figure out, we're getting so smart about all
this stuff, they will figure out a way to like
work you out without you having to do much like
you get wherever, yeah, where everyone's just totally lounging around
watching TV. If I if I had a nickel for
every Wally reference I got. In my line of work,

(27:26):
it comes up almost every day everyone I'm interviewing, It's like, oh,
it's just Wally. It's all the time.

Speaker 3 (27:32):
I feel like the opposite is kind of happening though,
because I feel like people are becoming more active interesting.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
I think that maybe it's just I think maybe you are.
Why are you so appy? Not?

Speaker 2 (27:43):
I just feel like people are more aware of health.

Speaker 1 (27:45):
I do.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
I feel like Wally like obviously people like are not
healthy in that, which is odd.

Speaker 2 (27:52):
So it's like the opposite's happening.

Speaker 3 (27:53):
It's like people are more aware, especially with like the
Apple Watch, all the health stats you can get just
from like looking at your phone totally great.

Speaker 1 (28:01):
So I was at the gym. Seriously, I was at
the gym, not yesterday, but the day before, and it
was like one of those days you were just tired,
you don't really feel like going. But I wanted to
get my minutes on my watch, so I just did
the quickest, shortest. It was like a twenty seven minute
workout from Active and I knew i'd get my minutes
because I already had like two, or i'd pick up
the rest throughout the day and sure enough, you know,

(28:22):
you do your workout, you feel better. But I did
it just for the ring to be closed on my
Apple Watch. And then I saw this trainer that I
know there and she's like, oh, so, like I saw
you doing that cardio today and I'm like, yep, gotta
get those minutes. And she's like, hey, that's you know,
nothing wrong with that.

Speaker 2 (28:34):
Yeah, that's awesome, good for you.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
So I bought a package of fifteen personal training sessions.
All right, let's talk about Google Maps. Now, let's talk
about Google Maps. They turn fifteen. Wow this week, How
crazy is that? Fifteen? Megan, you were just a you
were a tiny t what's the equivalent of a lasts

(28:56):
a last. You were just a tiny lass when Google
Maps came.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
Out and Scottish references.

Speaker 1 (29:01):
It's so weird to think that before Google Maps we
had ways of getting around which we're asking people for directions,
printing out map quest directions, Thomas guide.

Speaker 2 (29:12):
Using your compass?

Speaker 1 (29:15):
Did she?

Speaker 2 (29:15):
Is that just me?

Speaker 1 (29:16):
I don't think people use compasses. Maybe you did, Sunstone.
I don't know whatever you did. But the reality is
Google Maps changed everything, and now I don't know about you.
Has someone ever tried to give you directions lately?

Speaker 2 (29:30):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (29:30):
And what do you say? And what do you say
to them?

Speaker 2 (29:32):
I just go I can't. This is too much information,
you say, I have my phone. I'm like, no, no, no,
don't tell me. I don't want to know.

Speaker 1 (29:40):
I'll be fine. Yeah, I will just follow the blue
line on my phone to my death.

Speaker 3 (29:44):
I'm so happy though, and I can like figure it out,
like figure out how to get home from someplace.

Speaker 2 (29:50):
It's like, oh, I just I'll take this freeway. I
know what I'm doing.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
I put my Google Maps on. Whether I'm driving to
work every single morning just to get to work. Yes,
Now here's why though, because it's the traffic. Yes, it
is it is. Yes, it has saved me twice where
it said All of a sudden, I put it on
and I see it's routing me some weird way, and
I'm like groggy, and I'm like, oh, give me a break.
I follow it, and sure enough, there's a huge accident

(30:13):
on the freeway. It routes me around it, and I
am like, wow, that was a lifesaver. And that happened
at least twice in recent memory.

Speaker 2 (30:19):
Oh wow.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
I also put it every day when I bring my
kids or when I pick up my kids from school.
You just never know. We live in Los Angeles. You
never know there could be something on the streets. And
what I like to do is I also like to
be a contributor to the data that these maps apps
are kind of sucking up from all the phones. So
I feel like, yeah, I feel like I'm doing my
part and like giving them that data from my phone

(30:40):
of what it looks like on the roads.

Speaker 2 (30:42):
That's great, good for you.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
So Google Maps turning fifteen, you will notice there's a
brand new icon for the app, and there's some they
say there's new features. Well, the app is actually getting
more complicated. I feel like Google Maps has just gotten
kind of bloated. I think what they're trying to do is,
since Google Maps is so popular actually on the iPhone,
like Google needs a way of being a trojan horse
on your phone an Android, they have free access to everything.

(31:07):
But what if people use the most on their phone,
probably Google Maps on the iPhone. So they're thinking, well,
how many features can we build in to Google Maps
that kind of still give us data, that kind of
still give people access to Google products. So here's all
the things you get now. Five tabs across the bottom.
Explore which helps you find things nearby, Commute which tells
you about your route, saved which is a list of

(31:27):
all your places which I have on Yelp, Contribute which
lets you share your local knowledge. I'm a big fan
of sharing pictures on Google Maps. I love doing that.
I've got like eight million views of my pictures. Whoa
updates which is a feed of trending spots nearby. So
it's all those things that are now baked into the
Google Maps app. But for ninety nine percent of people,
what are they using Google Maps for? I need directions

(31:49):
from A to B. That's it. Yeah, Like, when was
the last time you found a restaurant to go to
on Google Maps. Never never, I mean me either, No,
I mean I always go to yelp.

Speaker 2 (31:57):
But is there a way?

Speaker 3 (31:58):
I know, if you're on your desk and you're searching
on Google Maps, you can like change the time, Like
if you're leaving, yes, two days at this time and
you want to get there by two pm?

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Can you do that on the app?

Speaker 1 (32:08):
You can? I actually wrote this down because oh wow,
you're predicting. I'm actually going to do a little video
of some Google Maps tips. So I wrote it down already.
So you're talking about the one that tells you. On
the desktop, it's super easy. You just say like, oh,
I want to leave at nine am, and you just
change a little slider. On mobile, it's not as a parent.
But if you're on iOS, you have to go to
the upper right hand corner after you get directions. So

(32:30):
get directions, okay, Then go to the upper right hand corner.
There's a little three buttons that's the menu button, and
you have to choose set a reminder to leave. I know,
it's weird they hide it beneath that.

Speaker 2 (32:40):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
So even though it says set a reminder to leave,
you can still talk. You can still scroll through and
get an idea of the time. So let's say you
scroll through and you say, I want to be there
at six pm on Friday night. You set all that
with the dials, and then it'll say you need to
leave by five point fifteen and it will tell you that,
and then you can set a reminder and your phone
will send you notification, or you can just look at
that information be like, all right, I got a budget
about forty five minutes. On Android, once you choose directions,

(33:03):
you hit the menu button and it says choose set
depart or arrive time. And once you do that, you
can choose when you want to leave or arrive. They
don't have a notification for you on Android built into
the maps app. I know. It's weird. I think because
they use it through your calendar, they kind of see
where you're going and give you notifications. Sometimes it's very
hit or miss, okay, but that's how you see it

(33:24):
on Android. It'll give you a range of time that'll
take to get there, so it is there on the app.
I just don't understand why they don't make it more prominent,
and I think they should. And the only reason I
have that written down. Is because I literally, you know,
I like to do these little videos for Instagram, these
sixty second tech tips, and I just was like, oh,
maps would be kind of a fun one. Yeah, because
there's a lot more than meets the eye.

Speaker 3 (33:45):
Okay, This next next question comes from Patty. I downloaded
a song from iTunes and I would like to use
it for a ring tone on my iPhone eight plus.

Speaker 2 (33:55):
How do I go about it? I used to try
to do this all the time when I was younger.

Speaker 1 (33:59):
Remember when ringes were like such a big thing.

Speaker 3 (34:01):
Yeah, you would buy them for like two dollars, And
I remember trying to, like I bought a song on
iTunes and then put it on garage band and tried
to make it like twenty eight seconds all that.

Speaker 2 (34:12):
It's complicated, but it.

Speaker 1 (34:14):
Is complicated more. But a lot of people don't know.
For a while, they were selling ring tones in the
iTunes store. I don't even know if they sell them anymore,
but I bought a few recently. I wonder if I
can look back, I might have bought the Nickelback you know,
like a Nickelback song. Yeah, okay, back in the day.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
Oh, Jason al Dean No that would be now, oh okay.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
Well you know your country music. Huh yeah, Now it
would be Brett Young.

Speaker 2 (34:37):
I was gonna say Brett Eldridge, isn't he.

Speaker 1 (34:39):
Brett, Yeah he is.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
I just make a name.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
I think Brett Eldridge is. Oh, what the heck was
that Brett Eldridge? He sings Dan No, I don't know. Okay, yeah,
that sounds like all the want to be that song
lose my mind anyway. So I believe in some way
you can probably get ring tones, maybe from iTunes. Still,

(35:02):
but there's two ways that I would recommend to do this.
If you want to do it the free, simple easy way,
it's not really simple, I guess I should call it
the freeway is to download garage band on your iPhone. Yeah,
but it's very common. It's not easy to do like
the average person without following some sort of some sort
of tutorial online. It's not like it says, hey, make

(35:25):
a ringtone, which they should have as an option.

Speaker 2 (35:27):
Especially by now.

Speaker 3 (35:28):
Yeah, just like it's basically a little you're basically it's
like a little commercial for that song.

Speaker 2 (35:33):
If it plays, you know, exactly.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
So I would recommend if you want to do what's
the person's same that emailed uh, Patty, Patty, I would
recommend if you want to do it for free, download
garage Band to your iPhone. It's a free app. Get
the song that you want. You can either have it
on your phone or you can drop it into your
iCloud files app, and that way you just have it
access to it, and then just Google garage Band ringtone

(35:58):
tutorial and just fallow all the steps. I tried it
this morning. It's a little complicated. You have to basically
make a little like piano sound or something or any
other instrument sound, then import the ring the music, and
then trim the music to thirty seconds or less, and
then exit out and then share your creation as a
ring tone. Once you do it, it's not tough. It's

(36:21):
just a lot of steps.

Speaker 3 (36:22):
Well, so I also just went to sounds on like
settings through on the iPhone. And if you go to
ring tone, there's a tone.

Speaker 1 (36:30):
Store there is they still have it.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
So they still have it, and you can buy ring
tones and they're a dollar twenty nine.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
Yeah, but nobody wants to spend that on a ringtone.
So I think that there was a time when people
were excited about that. Now I feel like people like
I would like a custom ring tone if I can
make it for free. But I am surprised that they
still sell it.

Speaker 2 (36:47):
Yeah, me too.

Speaker 1 (36:48):
So here's my other option. There's an app if you
want to make it drop dead simple. There's an app
called I ring ire I and GG by a company
named soft soft soft a Reno. There's a soft Reno
and that is probably the easiest way. They do have
a free download, so I believe you can try it out,

(37:09):
maybe make one, see what you think. But this is
this is the easiest way. You can imagine it's drag
and drop any song onto this thing. It'll create the
ring tone, put it on your phone, or you can
even search for a song that you want and just
import it that way. I mean, it's really it's easy.
And let's see how much it is to actually buy it.
It is? Are you ready? Yeah? Twenty bucks? Oh so

(37:31):
you can get twenty if you imagine what's twenty divided
by one one dollar thirty cents. How much do you
say it was? Yeah, one one thirty, So you can
if you make fifteen ring tones, you've paid for itself.

Speaker 2 (37:43):
Well, there you go. Did you ever use LimeWire no.

Speaker 1 (37:47):
I never you know, I'm a big like not anti pirrator,
but I just mean being in the creative business, being
in the creative space. I never wanted to steal other
people's content, and I'm not judging people who did. I
think that was it made the way the things we
have now are all based on that. Like we might
not have Netflix if we didn't have LimeWire or exactly yeah,

(38:10):
you know, or Napster before LimeWire. But it's one of
these things where I personally just never did it. Of
course I experimented and saw what was available. Yeah, but
there's two things I always hated. Number One, I couldn't
guarantee the quality you download a song. You have no
idea if it was like some ripped CD, someone did
it at a lower bitrate or whatever it was. It
didn't sound good. With movies, I'm not watching a movie

(38:31):
with someone in the theater in front of me their
head popping into it, or just all these things. So
and to me, it's just it's easier to buy it
or rent it and to just do it the legit way.
And so that's why anyway.

Speaker 3 (38:44):
No, I mean, I just remember lime Wire was like
a thing when I was in middle school.

Speaker 1 (38:48):
Oh yeah, it was a big thing. I'll never forget.
My friend in college, Adam, showed me this tiny clipping
of a newspaper article. And this was before any peer
to peer file sharing had started. Now, I believe Napster
was around, but this was peer to peer. Like Napster
was just for music, but this kind of opened it
up to more peer to peer, which you can share anything, PDFs, books, movies, whatever.

Speaker 2 (39:11):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (39:12):
And it was a tiny little article. It's like called
the Oh gosh, was it the new project or GNU
peer to peer? And it was like it just said
how it could not be stopped. Oh it was once
it's once it's there and computers are on board, it
could never be stopped. Wow. And I just like in
my little mind back then, it was so like boggle.

Speaker 3 (39:33):
You took like a you like remember like, okay, this moment, Yeah,
everything's changed.

Speaker 1 (39:38):
Yeah, because it's just like it made so much sense that, yeah,
these computers, it was decentralized versus something like Netflix. If
Netflix shuts down, that's it, it goes away. Yeah. But
these other sites online that are peer to peer sharing,
you can't shut them down. There's always someone online that's
gonna have stuff to share, and it just keeps going.

Speaker 2 (39:56):
So it's like the universe.

Speaker 1 (39:59):
It's kind of like the kind of like yes, kind
of like the universe. Wow, that's gonna do it for
this episode of the show. If you want links to
anything we talked about, take a look at the show notes.
If you have a question for me, Megan, tell them
where to go.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (40:15):
If you have a question, go to Rich's website, which
is rich on Tech dot tv and hit the contact
button to send your question.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
Another website to go to is rate this podcast dot
com slash rich on Tech. You can rate and review
the show. It helps other people discover it. If you
don't want to do that, or you can't or you
don't feel like it, just text a link of the
show to your friend and tell them they gotta listen.
You gotta find me on Instagram at rich on Tech.

(40:42):
Just a reminder. Next week is Valentine's Day. Let's get
those reservations, flowers, candy, all the stuff that.

Speaker 2 (40:49):
Did you get your flowers already?

Speaker 1 (40:51):
I don't do flower well, sometimes you do flowers. If
you can't do all that stuff, just get your Amazon
Prime Now account set up. Do you have big plans
for valance. I'd say no, Okay, you said we're going
out to dinner, Megan. How can folks find you online?

Speaker 3 (41:06):
I'm on Twitter at producer Meghan if you want to
send me a question Perfect.

Speaker 1 (41:12):
Thanks for all the feedback on Rich Tomorrow. Thank you
for listening. We will talk to you real soon
Advertise With Us

Host

Rich DeMuro

Rich DeMuro

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