Apple Posts Serious Security Update, El Goog’s Workers Organize, and GameStop Rises Like the Phoenix

I’m Never In On the Beginning of These Surges

It’s a new week with a new President and I’m glad to be back on with Mark Starling, Seth, John, and the First News 570 crew. This week, gamers rescue GameStop, Google’s employees organize in a new union, and Apple posts a security update you should really install. You can listen to Mark and I point and laugh while talking about the wild and crazy technology world every Thursday morning, LIVE at 6:43am Eastern.

APPLE POSTS SECURITY UPDATE TO FIX SERIOUS FLAWS

We’re going to start this segment off with real news. If your smartphone is made by a fruit company you should seriously consider installing the latest update. Apple is encouraging iPhone and iPad users to immediately update their devices to the latest version of iOS. Current iDevices users are susceptible to a chain of software exploits where hackers can hijack the device being able to run arbitrary code of their choosing, including downloading contacts. The latest iOS, 14.4, was released last Tuesday and can be installed by many users over the air.

WORKERS ORGANIZE UNDER THE GOOGLEPLEX

Tuesday was a busy day. Google employees from around the world have formed a coalition called Alpha Global which is made up of 13 Google employee unions from around the world. Alpha Global consists of 10 unions including the US and Canadian based union, the Alphabet Workers Union. The AWU consists of 700 workers across the United States and Canada and is a member union affiliated with the larger Communications Workers of America union. Google employees have formed these unions after high profile firings and investigations of Google employees questioning the company’s use of AI technologies.

GAMERS KEEP GAMESTOP ALIVE WITH STOCK PURCHASES

As more game consoles make downloadable content accessible and require less and less physical media, Gamestop has struggled. The company has lost hundred of millions of dollars in 2019 and 2020 and things were looking pretty bleak. Hedge fund investors have been eyeing the company in an attempt to short the stock. Over the last several weeks, the gaming faithful have banded together andused social networks to cause Gamestop stock to rally. Gamestop stock had been trading around $2.57 per share at the end of December. Yesterday, Gamestop shares have been trading at $347 per share yesterday afternoon. The only thing driving Gamestop shares now is demand as the company continues to lose lots of money.

The 2020 Annual Gift Guide, and Hackers Try to Freeze Out Coronavirus Deliveries

I’ve had an interesting 7 days. If you weren’t around last week, I was getting my McRib on and was satiated in its good ole sweet, tangy, and meaty juiciness. This is the last week I’ll be on with Mark Starling and the First News 570 crew. This week, we’re only going to talk about the hackers who are trying to hack da Rona vaccine, and share some insight into the perfect gifts you can get your loved ones. You can listen to Mark and I point and laugh while talking about the wild and crazy technology world every Thursday morning, LIVE at 6:43am Eastern.

Y’all, It’s a Personal Fireplace

HACKERS ARE TRYING TO DISRUPT COVID-19 SUPPLY CHAIN

After many months spent indoors, the world is anticipating relief. Pfizer, BioNTech, and the world’s leading biotechnology companies have reached a point in proving a reliable vaccine. While pharmaceutical researchers and scientists have been busy working on a cure, hackers have been busy trying to disrupt the cure from reaching those who need it. Global phishing campaigns have been in effect since September in a bid to try and fool vaccine supplier officials into installing ransomware, spyware, and other malicious code on their computers. IBM security researchers have stated the attacks are aimed at executives and officials at the companies responsible for delivering the vaccine on the cold chain. Pfizer’s vaccine needs to rest at a chill -70 degrees Celsius and hackers have been targeted companies that deliver cold vaccines. This plainly sucks. There will always be people who want to tear things down and can’t make anything of their own. I know this first hand.

IT’S HERE! THE ANNUAL GIFT GUIDE

The annual tradition is back. The 2020 Annual Gift Guide (Pandemic Edition) is up on Pinterest. There is something for everyone on this year’s gift guide but here are some highlights:

This is the first time a waffle iron has been added to the gift guide. William Sonoma’s TRNR waffle maker is not only a heavy duty head turner, but it’s also a snazzy waffle iron. You won’t go hungry as long as you have eggs, milk, baking soda, flour, vanilla, and patience.

The Apple Watch has made a consistent appearance on the gift guide, but we have to put the 6 on here. This watch is the best of its breed. It always stays on, has better battery life, better talk capability, and color. You won’t go wrong with it.

My name is Shaaday, not Sadie! Get it right! Who knows when Sade will next perform live, but you can bet the tickets will sell out within minutes. This boxset is a perfect gift for those who enjoy smooth grooves.

Sometimes I have to wonder what we’re really doing around here. This year’s gift guide features a fire pit, and a personal fireplace. Baby, I know it’s cold outside, but do you have to place your fireplace on my side of the bed?

The Gift Guide’s curators love coffee, but I swear they love coffee makers even more. The Instant Pod is one of this year’s entrants. You can spoil yourself by making the perfect instant espresso. Cheers.

Is it an adult Etch-a-Sketch, or is it an eco-friendly notebook? I’m a lover of paper, but I can also do my part to help the planet. The wipe-away stylings of the Rocketbook made this year’s gift guide. This notebook + app combo provides a reusable pen and ‘paper’ that allows you to sync your notes to the cloud. There is power in writing, and digitizing.

To answer your question, “YES!” The Apple MacBook Air has made this year’s gift guide. Apple’s latest MacBook Air costs $1,000 and may be the most powerful notebook computer in its class in the world. It’s all thanks to Apple’s M1 chip which packs a lot of power and 16 billion transistors on die. I’m tempted to get one for myself. And to answer your second question, “no.” The MacBook Pro won’t be making this year’s list. 16GB of RAM is respectable, and based upon all numbers, any more is unnecessary at this time, but the Pro machine should support higher memory counts.

No one other than First News 570’s morning jock, Mark Starling has recommended the Apple Home Pods for this year’s gift guide. Fashionably late to the party, the Fruit Company’s HomePod may snatch Alexa’s wig and force El Goog to search for its cables. Apple may not be first, but they always executes and with tight integration between machine, phone, watch, and TV it’ll be an interesting fight for the home.

You can find more gift ideas at the 2020 Annual Gift Guide’s Pinterest page. The curators are still adding gadgets and gear you can gift to your girl or guy. Stay tuned and make sure you follow the page.

McRib is Back, Mariah Wants to Share Her Cookies, and I Guess Tech News

I’m Planning on Using This Coupon, and No I Didn’t Get My Free McRib

I don’t know if there has been a more exciting week, since the week of August 21st, 1977! In one week, McDonald’s has reissued the McRib, and Mariah Carey has released a chocolate chip cookie line. It’s too much! Someone save me from myself.

Yeeaahhhh, My Wife Asked If I Wanted to Try Mariah’s Cookies

Lots of suits this week in the tech world. Here’s another week of tech talk with Mark Starling and the First News 570 crew. This week, New York and a bunch of states want to sue Facebook, Amazon announces a new device to enforce employee compliance, and El Goog is sued for spying on employees then firing them. You can listen to Mark and I point and laugh while talking about the wild and crazy technology world every Thursday morning, LIVE at 6:43am Eastern.

AMAZON ANNOUNCES CORONA CORPORATE COMPLIANCE TATTLER

This week, Amazon announced Panorama, an electronic appliance that plugs into a company’s existing closed circuit TV system that enforces employee compliance. The system uses off-the-shelf AI technology to determine if employees are wearing face masks. Amazon is advertising that the system could be used to perform automated inspection tasks such as searching for product defects in manufacturing. Fender Guitar says it uses Panorama to track the amount of time it takes an employee to assemble a guitar. Potentially, there can be negative impacts to employee morale when monitoring tools are abused. My suggestion? Hire the right people. Meanwhile, Amazon IS paying its employees $500MM in bonuses.

EL GOOG ILLEGALLY FIRES WORKERS AFTER SPYING ON THEM

The National Labor Relations Board has filed two complaints against Google after learning they fired the employees after spying on their behaviors. The two employees, Laurence Berland and Kathryn Spiers, were fired after engaging in employee organizing and activism. Google, the former ‘Do No Evil’ corporation, have had employee relations issues these past two years. Employees have staged walkouts for Google’s work with DoD and allegations of sexual harassment. My wife has contracted for Google, and one of my colleagues told me she’d never work at the Googleplex again. Go figure.

PREVIEW: GROUP OF US STATES PLAN TO SUE FACEBOOK

Talk about telegraphing your intentions. A group of states, led by New York, are planning to sue Facebook on the grounds of antitrust violations. No one knows what is going to be listed in the suit, but it will be the second suit governments have brought against a large tech company for antitrust violations with Google being the first this year. The US Federal Trade Commission has had its sites on Apple, Amazon, Facebook and Google since 2019 and Congress has interviewed the tech CEOs several times this year. Somewhere in a grove of trees in Washington state, Bill Gates is looking up from his book and thinking, “ha!”

Apple Pays Up Big for Another Batterygate Settlement, Google Gets in the Banking Biz, Cats Can Now Talk

I Still Don’t Know Why the Cat is Eating a Salad

It’s Thursday! Chris Krebs is gone after securing an effective election. So, it’s been another wild week. Here’s another week of tech talk with Mark Starling and the First News 570 crew. This week, Apple pays up again for batterygate, a new app translates meows into English, and Google wants to be in your wallet. You can listen to Mark and I point and laugh while talking about the wild and crazy technology world every Thursday morning, LIVE at 6:43am Eastern.

THE FRUIT COMPANY ENTERS $113 MILLION SETTLEMENT FOR BATTERYGATE

Yesterday, Apple agreed to a settlement with 34 states to the tune of $113 million for throttling performance on older iPhones that received iOS updates. The settlements comes as Apple agreed that it was purposefully making phones slower in a bid to preserve battery life as iPhones aged over time. Apple argued that the battery performance degraded and one way to preserve a user’s battery life was to slow the phone down. Well, the courts and lawyers disagreed, but Apple did come to terms with this payout. This settlement comes after a previous Batterygate settlement Apple made to the tune of $500 million. Personally, I hold off on upgrading iOS for as long as I can. I was forced into updating it for my Apple Watch and my phone has been acting wonky every since.

NEW APP TRANSLATES MEOWS, CATS YAWN AND TURN AWAY

Sometimes, I really think I’m working on things that are too complicated. Instead of trying to solve real problems, I should spend my time working on nonsensical stuff. Like what? Well, how about an app that translates a cat’s meow into English. Yup! A former Amazon Alexa engineer, a former Amazon Alexa engineer, is responsible for the app idea. According to Javier Sanchez, the group technical product manager at Akvelon, the software developer, the end goal is to make a smart collar that can be used to translate speech. Seems like a gimmick to me, but users on the website are pleased with the app, claiming that their cat now tells them, “I’m in love,” 90% of the time. The app uses advanced AI techniques to decipher cat meows. Cat experts say that cats don’t have a language like their human masters, but their masters don’t care.

EL GOOG GETS INTO FINANCIAL SERVICES WITH NEW PAY APP

This week, Google relaunched its Google Pay app in a bid to compete with Apple, Venmo, and other financial services technology companies. The app has moved beyond a simple tap-to-pay function and will now provide users with the ability to link bank accounts and credit cards with the app. Google is saying AI technology can provide advanced insights into spending habits and will replace the same functions users have at their banks. Google says their app will use your spending data to select the best accounts to use for making purchases. For instance, it may select a credit card for purchase if it provides the best cash back bonuses. Google is touting strict privacy rules for the app, but I’d imagine they are mining your spending data which will result in better ads.

Ticketmaster Wants to Know If You’re Sick, Apple Tells Intel: ‘It’s not You, It’s Me’, SEGA Sells Arcade Operating Business

Apple Debuts M1, Tells Intel It’s not You, It’s Me

It’s Thursday! It’s been a wild and rough work week and I need a drink. Here’s another week of tech talk with Mark Starling and the First News 570 crew. This week, Ticketmaster wants to use apps to figure out if you’ve gotten your COVID shot, SEGA sells a big chunk of arcade operating business signaling the end of an era, after years of building processors for its phones Apple announces its first processor for Mac, and Wal-Mart announces pilot robo-delivery service in Scottsdale using autonomous driving vehicles. You can listen to Mark and I point and laugh while talking about the wild and crazy technology world every Thursday morning, LIVE at 6:43am Eastern.

TICKETMASTER PLANS TO USE HEALTH PASSES SO SHOW CAN GO ON

Excited to get performers back onstage after Pfizer’s COVID-19 announcement, Ticketmaster, the company that charges 100% fee for tickets, announced plans to use third party health information applications to provide information on whether or not a ticket purchaser has been vaccinated against COVID-19. Fans wanting to see a live show will have to verify that they’ve been vaccinated against COVID-19 after purchasing their ticket. (I read that a few times, with Ticketmaster, it’s always after the ticket has been purchased) The purchaser will have to provide some information to Ticketmaster that will allow them to retrieve data from CLEAR Health Pass, IBM Digital Health Pass, or information provided by LabCorp or CVS Minute Clinic. Ticketmaster will be using digital ticketing (there goes souvenirs) and its SmartEvent technology to lower the chance of spreading the virus. Ticketmaster plans to roll out these plans in 2021 provided we’re in a better place with the pandemic.

IN SIGNAL OF DEPARTURE, APPLE ANNOUNCES NEW CHIP FOR MACS

This week, Apple announced a new microprocessor named the M1 for Macs. The new microprocessor is a system on a chip (SoC) which includes an 8-core CPU, 8-core GPU, and a 16-core neural engine microprocessor to be used for artificial intelligence processing. Combining all of these discrete components results in more performance while consuming less power according to Apple. Apple is using a new 5-nanometer manufacturing process which results in 16 billion transistors on the chip. Apple’s new chip is a signal for parting with Intel as it reduces their dependency on the processor supplier. Oh, and they brought back the PC guy.

HIT BY COVID-19 HARD, SEGA SELLS OFF ARCADE OPERATING BUSINESS

In August, we reported how SEGA had closed the Akihabara, an iconic arcade which had served as a nerd mecca in Tokyo. SEGA had closed the Akihabara because COVID-19 forced players to stay home. SEGA has announced that it will be selling an 85.1% stake in its arcade operating business to Genda, a Tokyo company specializing in arcade rentals. Genda will take control of the arcades and operate them, but they will still have the SEGA name and branding. SEGA had over 200 arcades operating in Japan before the sale.

WAL-MART CRUISES IN SCOTSSDALE WITH ROBO DELIVERY SERVICE

Wal-Mart is partnering with General Motors owned Cruise in offering robo-delivery services in Scottsdale, Arizona. Wal-Mart will be offering the services as a pilot and hasn’t specified how many cars will be in the robo-delivery fleet. Wal-Mart has partnered with Ford, Nuro, Udelv, and Waymo autonomous driving companies in a bid to get ahead of the anticipated $100 billion food-at-home delivery market by 2025.