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Jerod Santo: Mat Ryer is back, and he's got a Back to the Future T-shirt on. You're back!

Mat Ryer: I'm back!

Jerod Santo: The musical. There's a musical Back to the Future. The musical?

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Jerod Santo: I didn't know this.

Mat Ryer: "Great Scott Marty!" I can't believe you haven't heard of the musical.

Jerod Santo: I haven't.

Adam Stacoviak: Never. And I'm a big fan.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, of the originals, I assume. Not of the music al, if you've never heard of it.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, of course, I meant the Back to the Future fan.

Mat Ryer: Since he can't logically mean that, Jerod, I would have just deleted it in my brain before saying it, if I were you. Yeah, this is a musical in London. I'm trying to defeat the camera as it follows my face...

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, he's really -- for the audio only folks, I'm going to narrate this, to some degree. He's like lifting his shirt... I don't know if he's trying to like show us something...

Jerod Santo: I think he's trying to cover up his face, which would be much appreciated...

Adam Stacoviak: Beneath or the actual decal that's on his shirt? It says "Back to the Future, the musical."

Jerod Santo: Don't pull it up any further than that, please.

Mat Ryer: And then the decal is "You've got doc, you've got your Marty McFly..."

Jerod Santo: So it's a stage show in London. Okay, I've never heard of this.

Mat Ryer: It's a stage show in London, yeah. And a musical, and a really good one. I enjoyed it.

Adam Stacoviak: There's a lot of controversy around this film, you know that, right?

Mat Ryer: Is there? Well, some people say it's not possible.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, I'm gonna try to recap it, to some degree. So the dad in the original film was not treated very well as an actor. And that's why in part two -- spoiler...! The actor was not treated very well, and had some issues with them, and something like that... And so basically, at least in this day, as an actor, you essentially gave your likeness to the franchise you were with. And that's why in part two, the dad is upside down. You can't recognize a person when they're upside down, and so they transplanted his likeness with virtual effects, and all this different stuff... And there's a big thing with this. And it was a muck. Amazing films, but that's a thing no one really thinks about, is the dad was not the dad in part two, and that's why he's upside down, is to hide his likeness.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. I bet the lawyers didn't see that one coming. It's like, "No, we've protected your likeness. There's no way out of this."

Adam Stacoviak: That's right.

Mat Ryer: Spielberg is just too smart. He's like "Pop him upside down."

Adam Stacoviak: I don't even know how much the directors got into that, really... I wonder if it was like producers... I'm sure the director's involved, but he probably advocated for this. But yeah, it was a big deal. Sorry I can't give the full story, because I'm not that versed in it, but I'm a familiar with the controversy in the whole situation.

Jerod Santo: So the actor is Crispin Glover, George McFly being his name in the original. Now, when you say the dad is upside down - I haven't seen Back to the Future 2 in a long time. What exactly do you mean by that? Is he literally upside down in the shot?

Adam Stacoviak: Well, you remember they go to the future in part two. They literally go to the future. Because they went to the past in part one. It's called Back to the Future. It's like the weirdest thing, right?

Jerod Santo: They went back to the future...

Adam Stacoviak: Right. They went literally back, after they went to the future from going back to the past.

Mat Ryer: The future's in the forward, so how can you go back in it?

Adam Stacoviak: So in part two, they literally go into the future... And I believe they go to our timeframe. It was like 2015, or something like that.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, 2015.

Adam Stacoviak: Which was obviously not now, but it was recently now.

Jerod Santo: They went into the future, but it's the past.

Adam Stacoviak: Right. And so in that future, the dad was upside down because he'd hurt his back, and this thing he was using was something to make his back better. And his hair was upside down, and he kept flipping it, and... Yeah.

Mat Ryer: It was floating around upside down. Because you can do that in 2015.

Jerod Santo: I remember the hoverboard. I remember the tiny pizza that gets huge. Always wanted one of those. I figured we'd have them by now, but maybe like physics, or something... Laws of the Universe. Can't do it. Sports Almanac was pretty cool...

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, my gosh... That was pretty cool.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, it was a cool idea.

Jerod Santo: I want one of those.

Mat Ryer: But then Biff got it, didn't he? And we all know what happened there.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, and he got rich.

Mat Ryer: He did, actually. He did quite well and became President.

Adam Stacoviak: It says here "Crispin Glover", as you said, Jerod, "was a joy to watch, but was absent from the sequels. What happened?" And this was Collider. We'll throw this in the show notes. And this post explains it, but there's tons of YouTube videos on it, and whatnot.

Jerod Santo: So right now I'm thinking back to that spoiler horn I just wasted here, because - is the part that you spoiled is that he's upside down in part 2? [laughter] Is that a major plot point? I can't remember.

Mat Ryer: No, I think he means he spoiled the fact that it's not -- everyone's probably tuning into Back to the Future 2, all the kids are on the way to see it... They want to see Crispin, and they're gonna be bitterly disappointed.

Jerod Santo: Okay, fair enough.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, we had the horn, Jerod. You know, like any new toy, you've got to play with that toy.

Jerod Santo: I know. As soon as you said spoiler, I was like "Hold on, I've gotta push this button. That's a spoiler horn."

Adam Stacoviak: Horn away.

Mat Ryer: I'll try and spoil some things, too.

Jerod Santo: Okay. Well, you do naturally quite well.

Mat Ryer: Thank you. Just a quick question then - do you own my likeness because of this? Like, how does this work? Because you have to have permission to put this video out.

Jerod Santo: Right, but you gave us permission, do you not?

Mat Ryer: Well, for this likeness, we didn't ever talk about it. And how alike does it have to be?

Adam Stacoviak: That's actually a really good point, because there's a lot of people who work in the - I would say recording, generally, space; video to audio. And you really should have an agreement of some sort, or a likeness agreement, how it will be used. I mean, that is the right way to do things, honestly.

Jerod Santo: Right.

Mat Ryer: You could put me on T-shirts.

Jerod Santo: Or underwear.

Adam Stacoviak: And now that you say that - I mean, it would be smart of us as a business to do that. But it would be obvious. So no, we don't. But you know...

Mat Ryer: [06:01] Yeah. You could sell Mat Ryer underwear, and I would have to use my likeness of this. And sell hundreds and thousands of copies. Not copies, but editions... And I see none of that.

Adam Stacoviak: Right. Underwear maybe not. I would say diapers. We'll probably put your likeness on diapers.

Jerod Santo: Oh, or depends. That'd be a really good line. "It depends..."

Mat Ryer: Tech diapers for when you're a 10x developer. Well, this is what I'm here to talk about today.

Jerod Santo: There you go.

Adam Stacoviak: No, it's "Mat Depends", Jerod. "Mat Depends."

Jerod Santo: Mat does depend. Well, he depends on many things... Mostly himself, when he's coding, because Mat here, it turns out - we've found out in the interim... By the way, Mat, we have to thank you for helping us sort of give birth to this new show, because last time you were on the Changelog Podcast, which you're not technically on right now, but you are technically on right now... It's kind of like back to the future, in the past...

Mat Ryer: Oh my gosh, what's canon?

Jerod Santo: Everything's canon.

Mat Ryer: Oh, man...

Jerod Santo: Yeah. So watch what you say.

Mat Ryer: Okay. This is complicated. How many timelines has Changelog got then? How is this not on Changelog?

Adam Stacoviak: It is.

Jerod Santo: This is a new flavor of the Changelog called Changelog & Friends. This is a talk show. See, we invited you on just to talk.

Adam Stacoviak: That's right.

Jerod Santo: It shows our lack of judgment. But here you are, nonetheless. And you were on our prototype show. It was called "Git with your friends." And we did a little bit of prototype. Did you know that we were testing you? We were testing things out when we invited you on that day?

Mat Ryer: No. Was I just a guinea pig? Did you own my likeness?

Adam Stacoviak: We did. We put it out there.

Jerod Santo: I don't know if we owned it, but we certainly used it... And it turns out people actually enjoyed that episode.

Mat Ryer: Oh, nice.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, that was strange... So we thought, "Wow, maybe we're onto something here." So we invited you back...

Adam Stacoviak: How many enjoyed it? 31,000. Wow, at least 31,000 by our CMS's tracking, which is - it's missing about 10%, would you say, Jerod? About 10%? Maybe 12% or 15% tracking elsewhere?

Jerod Santo: Yeah. But 13 comments on the discussion thread, which is a good number of comments. And this gave us confidence to do this show again. So here we are. When we invited you back, you actually confessed to us that you think you're a 10x developer, and you wanted to talk about it on the show. Tell us more. Tell us more.

Mat Ryer: Well, a lot of people think 10x developers are mythical, like Australians. I haven't really got time to get into it now, but there's a lot of evidence that Australia is not real. But this is real. I'm here to tell you that 10x developers do exist. I happen to be one of them. I'm coming to just admit that now, and just be honest about it... And also to come and just share 10 simple tips to be a 10x developer.

Adam Stacoviak: Okay...

Mat Ryer: Just give it away for free.

Jerod Santo: So first of all, is it possible to ascend this hill? Are you born 10X or not? Are you just a rare unicorn? Do Adam and I have a chance?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, that is a great question. The thing is, whatever the truth is, you can never have the position that "Oh, I can just not be something." You just never should have that position about yourself.

Jerod Santo: So think positive. Positive thinking.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, I think so. So I think you have to work from the assumption that you can X up your dev, and become some of the higher X-es; it doesn't have to be 10.

Jerod Santo: Right. Maybe you only get to like 7.5x, but you're trying.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, that'd be amazing.

Adam Stacoviak: That's cool with me. I'll take that.

Jerod Santo: Alright, let's hear some of these 10 tips to be 10x.

Mat Ryer: Well, just before I start, I will just say, will you accept my cookies? You have to accept cookies.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Can I select certain ones? I'll take all your cookies, Mat...

Adam Stacoviak: Just the required ones...

Mat Ryer: Oh, you're not going into the advanced; you're not those guys -- who goes in those advanced settings of the cookie pop-up?

Adam Stacoviak: Every time. I'm relentless.

Jerod Santo: Do you really?

Adam Stacoviak: No!

Jerod Santo: Okay... [laughs]

Mat Ryer: He spends hours...

Adam Stacoviak: I just accept them. I'm just so tired of them. I'm like --

Jerod Santo: You look so serious, and I thought "Maybe Adam is the kind of guy who goes in and just selects..."

Adam Stacoviak: The occasional website.

Jerod Santo: My default is reject all. You're gonna ask me again next time anyways...

Mat Ryer: Yeah, well, they can't remember, can they, because you've rejected the cookie. That's why they can't remember Jerod.

Adam Stacoviak: Stack Overflow is relentless, man...

Jerod Santo: No, actually I accepted. No, I learned; I machine-learned it. StackOverflow I accepted over and over again, and I got sick of it. I'm not gonna keep accepting if you're not going to remember my setting. Like, that's what a cookie is for, you fools.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, what's wrong with them? Why are they doing that to us?

Jerod Santo: [10:10] So I've been rejecting ever since.

Adam Stacoviak: I've been wondering if this is like an MK Ultra thing...

Jerod Santo: Hmm...

Adam Stacoviak: ...with this accepting of the cookies. They're just like seeing how much they can push you.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: "How often can we get them to truly accept every single time they come here?" Because you have to, right?

Mat Ryer: It winds me up. We need to get rid of it.

Adam Stacoviak: You guys did it, didn't you, Mat? Wasn't it your fault?

Mat Ryer: It was the EU, yeah.

Jerod Santo: Well, technically not Mat's fault then, right?

Adam Stacoviak: Well, I blame Mat, really...

Jerod Santo: Do you still have to accept the cookies?

Mat Ryer: Well, I'll tell you, it just gets in your way of life. And I'm in a hurry. I'm trying to find out if it's normal to say "Cheers mate" to a cash machine. So I haven't got time for clicking. And nevermind all the advanced settings, and things. Yeah, so I'd say get rid of them. But anyway, you've accepted the cookies, so I can continue. And I will just say, number six is going to blow your mind.

Adam Stacoviak: No, we rejected them. We accepted the ones we had to have only, to be clear. So be clear, please.

Mat Ryer: You know, I've worked in tech a long time. I know exactly what a cookie is. And even I don't know what they are. What's going on?! Accept what?

Jerod Santo: [laughs] I know you're not being honest right now, because you're a web developer. Surely you know what cookies are.

Mat Ryer: What are you on about? Why do I have to click accept all the time?

Jerod Santo: I don't know. It's a good question.

Adam Stacoviak: Must have consent. Just like with your likeness, Mat. We can't just assume you want to give it to us. We have to explicitly say "Yes, you can have it and you can use it."

Mat Ryer: Yeah. But don't put me on pants.

Jerod Santo: Underwear. Not pants, underwear.

Mat Ryer: Underwear.

Adam Stacoviak: And we have a perpetual worldwide nonscindable license, your license to put you on Mat Depends, which is a future product coming to merch.changelog.com.

Jerod Santo: Mat Depends.

Mat Ryer: I like that product. I suspect Depends is a brand of adult diapers?

Adam Stacoviak: It is, yes.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, but not "Mat Depends."

Mat Ryer: That's really good joke. Credit where credit's due. That makes sense, once I figured out that it's the brand. The US audience is gonna love that from the beginning.

Jerod Santo: So they're gonna love it.

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, you weren't getting the joke for a bit there. I'm sorry...

Mat Ryer: No, but I like it.

Jerod Santo: You know, the best jokes is when the person later on tells you they like it, you know?

Mat Ryer: Oh, yeah.

Jerod Santo: They don't laugh at it, but like, that joke was good. Always feels great.

Adam Stacoviak: The audience is like "Can you just get to those 10 tips, please? I'm here for the tips. I'm here for the tips."

Mat Ryer: Yeah, yeah. Here come the tips. It's a good point.

Adam Stacoviak: Just the tips.

Mat Ryer: Okay. Number 10. Most developers don't know about this one simple trick... Coffee. It's delicious, healthy alternative to brushing your teeth.

Adam Stacoviak: That's the first tip.

Mat Ryer: Kick the day off with a cup of coffee. That's number 10. I mean, obviously, they're gonna get better...

Adam Stacoviak: Can you be specific with the coffee? Can you tell me like type of bean, regions from, what was the elevation it was grown? Was it in the shade? Was it in full sun?

Jerod Santo: Do these things matter?

Adam Stacoviak: It does, Jerod. Very much so.

Jerod Santo: Well, I don't know, but I'm asking Mat. For my 10x. I'm just here for the 10x, and I don't really care about the details. So if I have drink coffee, fine. But does it matter? Do I have to go to Nicaragua specifically to get my beans?

Mat Ryer: I feel like you should feel happy about it, so make sure they're not doing any evil. You can't have evil beans. You can't start the day with evil beans.

Jerod Santo: Okay, no evil beans. Taking notes.

Adam Stacoviak: What are evil beans?

Mat Ryer: You know how you have -- they talk about them being ethically sourced...

Jerod Santo: These are like blood diamonds?

Mat Ryer: Exactly. You don't want blood beans.

Jerod Santo: No blood beans. Alright. Fair.

Adam Stacoviak: There is a truth to that, yeah. Fair trade.

Mat Ryer: Fair trade. Exactly. You want to make sure everyone's getting a piece of the pie. Coffee pie. So yeah, a cup of coffee in the morning. That's simple. That's how I'll start.

Jerod Santo: So that's number ten. Are these in order of importance, or are you building to something here?

Adam Stacoviak: Building up to number one, actually.

Jerod Santo: I can't wait for number one. If number six is going to blow our mind, I can't wait for number one.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but hang on... On those lists online, when it says "Oh, here's the top 10 things. Number six is going to blow your mind." Why is it not number one, then? If it's that good, it's going to blow our minds, why is it number six? And why did you bother putting anything before it? Our minds are blown.

Jerod Santo: Maybe they know that they're not going to have you for number one, but they might get you to that second page, right?

Mat Ryer: That's literally it. They're just like "Just stay till number six, and we'll get a bit of ad revenue.

Jerod Santo: [13:57] "We'll be happy. Yeah, we'll get our clicks." You know...

Mat Ryer: "And we can justify our existence making these horrible websites."

Jerod Santo: Alright, let's hear number nine.

Mat Ryer: Okay, number nine. Standing desk.

Jerod Santo: I got that one on lock.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. A lot of people sitting down a lot... Also, don't just stand up forever. You've got to have the variety. It's all about variety. You can either get a desk that moves up and down; the standing, that's the sort of classic one. Or if you want to splash out, you can actually get your desk stationary, and have your floor go up and down.

Jerod Santo: I like that.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. And that's like if you really want to do it, that's how you do it. Go big. But yeah, standing desk. Change of scene, change of position...

Jerod Santo: So are each of these a multiplier? So if I got coffee and staying desk, now I'm a 2x, or 3x?

Mat Ryer: It could be, yeah. I think probably it does work like that, just for the sake of this format.

Jerod Santo: Good, because I'm two for two right here. I'm feeling pretty 10x so far. Keep going.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: Technically, you're 1.5, Jerod.

Jerod Santo: Okay. Well, I'm no mathematician...

Adam Stacoviak: Well, because you stand only, and he just said you can't stand only. You have to have variety. Although you do have a couch near you, so that is your non-standing. So I'll give you a 1.75 then.

Jerod Santo: I'll take it. Keep going, Mat.

Mat Ryer: I thought you meant that he squatted all day. I was gonna say, that's impressive. Half standing, half sitting.

Jerod Santo: That would be impressive. Like a wall sit, just hold that for the day... No big deal. What's next?

Mat Ryer: Number eight, be okay for things to not work out. A lot of things that slows us down - we really want to make sure we're not wasting our time. That itself can become a waste of time, where you get obsessed with trying to make sure you're not going to make a mistake. And sometimes you've got to just jump into it. At some point, you've got to jump into it. And usually, the sooner, the better. But that definitely does depends; Mat Depends. Coming soon, from Changelog.

Adam Stacoviak: Is that synonymous with "Move fast and break things"? Is that kind of like, is it similar grounds?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, it is. It's about "Be okay to make mistakes."

Jerod Santo: And just leave them there too, right? Just keep going.

Mat Ryer: Well, if you've got a reason to fix it though, that's great. That means you've got a reason to fix it. Like...

Jerod Santo: Is that like job security? Like, you have more work to do now, so that's great?

Mat Ryer: No, I just mean you get invalidation of the project. It's like, if someone's complaining, "Oh, I'm trying to do this thing, with this thing you've just built and released very quickly, but I can't do it", that is great.

Adam Stacoviak: It's a good point; you have to use the software to find the bugs. You don't care about the bugs if the software is not useful, or being used.

Jerod Santo: Or use the bugs to find the software. Chew on that for a minute...

Adam Stacoviak: That's true, yeah.

Jerod Santo: Alright, number seven.

Adam Stacoviak: Jerod's like "I'm over this one..." Seven, please. Go.

Jerod Santo: This one has almost made too much sense. I feel like it needed to be more ridiculous, but...

Mat Ryer: No, it's not a list of unpopular things to do to be a 10x.

Jerod Santo: I didn't say that.

Mat Ryer: Oh. Fair enough. Number seven - new keyboard. Treat yourself.

Jerod Santo: See, now we're back on ridiculous. I appreciate this one.

Mat Ryer: Some people have other interests. Some people have got kids... Some people have even got friends.

Adam Stacoviak: A few. A few people have friends.

Mat Ryer: But for the rest of us, mechanical keyboards, or just a different keyboard... Like, it's the thing you interface with the most, physically. Mix it up. Again, it's about variety. If you can, have a few that you cycle through.

Jerod Santo: How many?

Mat Ryer: I mean, I've got too many now. It's becoming weird. Yeah, I need help.

Jerod Santo: Do you name names?

Mat Ryer: I've just got a Keychron Q9.

Jerod Santo: Oh, it's got a cool, yellow Escape key, and a yellow return key. Or Enter. Oh, it's wired though. It has a wire, Mat... That's not 10x at all. Wires are not 10x. They slow you down.

Mat Ryer: Spoiler alert -- well, unpopular opinion. Get the song on, because I don't like wireless keyboards.

Jerod Santo: I might take the opposite on that. I like wireless. I hate wires. That's too popular. Alright, Mat... So I'm waiting. Here it is, number six is going to blow our minds...

Adam Stacoviak: Six. Go!

Mat Ryer: Write tests first, baby, and get good at it. Writing tests after is horrible. Writing them first - you're motivated... You get better results. You do. And they're done when you're finished. You don't then have this chore hanging over you.

Jerod Santo: How does that possibly make you move faster?

Mat Ryer: [18:02] Well, it does for me. I don't know. But genuinely, it's about clarity of thought, and it's about validating things as you go. It's probably like there's a bit more friction, but it's really healthy friction. So maybe there's a bit of -- like, if you just didn't have any tests at all, and just knocking something out as a prototype. In a way, that's kind of different. In that case, I sometimes do do that. But if it's something that I expect to have a life, and it's going to exist properly, I'll TDD it as much as I can, baby... Because I like the things it forces you to think about.

Jerod Santo: Have you tried test-only?

Mat Ryer: Well, I'm just gonna get ChatGPT to write the code.

Jerod Santo: I didn't say anything about code. I just think test-only development would be faster, technically.

Mat Ryer: So you're just writing tests...

Jerod Santo: Yeah, man. Really fast compared to everybody else.

Adam Stacoviak: Is being 10x about speed, or capability?

Jerod Santo: It's gotta be... Productivity. It has to be, right? That's the whole point. Your 10x more productive.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, you said "How is that faster?" So you're implying speed, because - faster. So how do you really classify what a 10x engineer/developer is? What specifically is it? Is it about speed, is it about getting more done in less time? Is it about better software, faster? Is it about shipped faster? Is it about users revenue faster? At what point is it a 10X thing?

Mat Ryer: I think that's a really good question. And there are probably people out there that made the same mistake I made when I originally heard this term... Because I originally thought it was 10 eggs. Like, people ate 10 eggs. You know, you get these tech bros that have these --

Adam Stacoviak: Eggs... Get outta here, Mat...

Mat Ryer: ...really weird things. It's just like "Oh, he's a 10 eggs developer."

Jerod Santo: Like in Rocky, where he drinks the eggs in the morning as he trains?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, just drinking eggs down.

Jerod Santo: And what do you want, salmonella?

Mat Ryer: I know. Did they not have it then? Maybe they haven't discovered it. Or is it just too strong that even salmonella is like "Yeah, I'm not even taking this guy on..."

Jerod Santo: Or he just considers it part of his training, like his body just has to overcome it.

Adam Stacoviak: I'm sorry, I have to do this prompted. He's back, Jerod. He's got his guitar real close. Do a song, Mat. 10x Developer, right now. Go.

Jerod Santo: 10 eggs developer... That's a good prompt. You're prompt-engineering over there, Adam...

Adam Stacoviak: And throw Mat Depends on there too somewhere. I'm like Howard Stern right now. That's what Howard Stern does, with his musical guests. He's like "Just go. Give it to me." Go.

Mat Ryer: [20:13]

If you want your code to really have good legs... You've gotta wake up and drink 10 eggs... Yeah, drink them down, all those eggs; it's gross, I know, it's giving you salmonella... But it's worth it... It is worth it..."

10 eggs.

Adam Stacoviak: Nice. Very good. Okay, so we've established 10x really translates to 10 eggs.

Mat Ryer: No, no, no, that's just what I originally thought, but I was wrong. So actually, don't listen to that song that we just did. Don't learn from it, definitely.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, that's just for fun.

Mat Ryer: Not even.

Adam Stacoviak: That's motivation. If you need the 10x motivation, you listen to 10 Eggs, the song, and you get going.

Jerod Santo: Oh. So to be a 10x developer you have to listen to the 10 Eggs song. That makes sense.

Mat Ryer: You can have one of those 10x days. You're waking up, you're like -- and by the way, if you're vegan, you can just have oat milk.

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, gosh... Did you hear about wood milk?

Jerod Santo: [laughs]

Mat Ryer: Maple syrup.

Adam Stacoviak: Not even kidding you. Are you guys familiar with Aubrey Plaza?

Jerod Santo: Yes.

Adam Stacoviak: She's an actress.

Mat Ryer: Oh, I thought it was a place.

Adam Stacoviak: She was in Parks and Recreation... That's one of her come-out, I guess --

Mat Ryer: It sounds like a place as well. It sounds like a park.

Adam Stacoviak: That's where she was really found and discovered as a great actress.

[21:44] This is an impression of my boss, Leslie Knope. "Women should do everything. Check out my four-color pen. Hey, everybody, listen up while I talk about some really, really important stuff. Parks, parks, parks, parks, parks. [unintelligible 00:21:54.25]

Adam Stacoviak: [22:02] She's a comedian, too. She's very comedic. She's also got a very serious face on her. And so you mentioned oat milk, and as a making fun of everybody who's drinking macadamia nut milk, and oat milk, and...

Jerod Santo: Almond milk, and...

Adam Stacoviak: ...pick whatever you can get milk out of milk, almond milk, you know... She said that she was revolting and going -- there's all these woods around her; she wanted to get milk from the woods.

[22:25] Now, let's take a look at how wood milk was born. Not born exactly. More like squished into a slime that's legal to sell.

Adam Stacoviak: And so she would chop down the tree... It's a whole thing. You should check it out on YouTube.

Jerod Santo: Wood milk.

Adam Stacoviak: It's hilarious. Hilarious. But it's making fun of everybody who's drinking almond milk, and oat milk and whatnot.

Jerod Santo: Plant-based milks. I think it was actually a campaign for milk.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, exactly. Exactly.

Mat Ryer: Or just to mock people who --

Jerod Santo: Well, it's supposed to be tongue-in-cheek and funny, but also - yeah, I'm sure there were people that were offended by it, because she's mocking them. But...

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah... It was not meant to be not offensive. It was slightly offensive, for sure.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. But you've got to be able to take a joke, haven't you? I mean, I drink oat milk, and if I got angry every time someone made a joke about me drinking oat milk, which is all the time, actually, and I am getting sick of it... And people on the street, shouting... When I've got people on the street shouting at me about it -- how would they even know I'm having it?

Adam Stacoviak: What does it sound like? They're like "Hey, Mat, you're drinking that oat milk again?" [laughter]

Mat Ryer: That's it.

Adam Stacoviak: What do they say to you?

Jerod Santo: This doesn't really hurt, does it?

Mat Ryer: Oh, it's just Oatboy, Oaty McOatface. "Is he drinking oat milk? Go get him!!"

Jerod Santo: Is this why those people in Berlin kept yelling at your "Wanker!", because you were drinking oat milk on the streets? Mat Ryer: They did shout that a lot. That could be why.

Jerod Santo: Now we have a reason.

Mat Ryer: Up next, it's number five... This is a match made in heaven. These are two-in-one, really.

Jerod Santo: So five is two.

Mat Ryer: Five is kind of two-in-one.

Adam Stacoviak: So it's five and four together.

Mat Ryer: They're in brackets. Yeah, they're together. It's not five and four. It's a tale as old as time... It's the classic pen and paper. Pencil if you like, but pen and paper. Material actual away from screens; use that to jot down ideas, write down insults if you want, if you're getting angry at a couple of -- say you're doing a podcast with a couple of people, and they're really annoying you... Write down your feelings. Don't let them come out. Write them down just to get them out, and then you can carry on being nice to them both.

Adam Stacoviak: Can you give me an example of journaling for you to be a 10x-er? Would you say like "Oh, this fmt thing has just really got me upset..." What do you write?

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Wait, is it diary entries? Is that what we're doing?

Mat Ryer: When you write about things like -- yeah, that you're upset about with the computer.

Jerod Santo: Isn't it mostly just like reinforcement? You're like "You can do this, Mat. You can be more productive. Remember the time that you coded real fast?"

Adam Stacoviak: "You are the best, really. You are 10x. You are 10 Eggs."

Mat Ryer: Play some sad music over this and I think the listeners would get a sense of this.

[24:59] Dear Diary, today was not an easy day. I'm afraid the compiler complained that I didn't have a semicolon in a really specific place. And... Like, it's the computer. So it knows; it's the one telling me that it needs a semicolon there. Put it there! Diary, it should just put it there itself. I'm livid. I didn't have my coffee this morning, because I was ill-prepared... And I'm worried about my likeness ownership on different streams I've been on. See you later, Diary. Bye!"

Jerod Santo: Of all the people to be worried about their likeness, Mat, I just don't think that'd be something that you should be concerned with.

Adam Stacoviak: But you are on to something though, I agree with this. Smarter compilers would be nice, right? If it's wrong, can you just correct it for me and tell me that you've corrected it for me, and then make my life happier? Don't yell at me... You know, and you're my minion. Do the minion work.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Yeah, it should be like "Sort it out. Do it yourself."

Adam Stacoviak: That's right.

Jerod Santo: [25:56] That reminds me of the Fly control command line tool. Fly. When you type fly, whatever, whatever, if there's a new version, it says "Update available. To update, type fly version upgrade." And I always wonder, why should I type upgrade if I want to update? Shouldn't I just type update? Inconsistencies... Hold on to that thought, we'll come back to it with developer experience, because that is annoying... Also, just go ahead and upgrade it for me. I'm fine, you know...

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but still, it's quite a good experience. Quite a good developer experience, isn't it? ...telling you that, in that moment when you're using it, there's an update? Quite nice.

Jerod Santo: And then you've got to type upgrade?

Mat Ryer: I mean, you can manage that, mate.

Jerod Santo: It's a completely different word, man...

Adam Stacoviak: It's the same with Homebrew. Homebrew you don't update things. You upgrade things in Homebrew.

Jerod Santo: I think we should introduce our friends to a thing called an alias. Like, when I type "fly version update", it should just be like "Oh, he meant upgrade, because this command doesn't do anything. But it's very close to that command that does exactly what he was thinking." Let's hold on to this for our later discussion. Mat, number four.

Mat Ryer: Number four - I don't know why, I've just written down "Water." I think it's because you need it, otherwise you might die.

[unintelligible 00:27:07.14]

Adam Stacoviak: These are amazing tips. I mean, this is like -- if I was a survivalist out in the woods, these are things I would do. I would journal and drink water, and 10 eggs in the morning.

Jerod Santo: So does this 10x anything? You can just 10x anything?

Mat Ryer: No. No, this is definitely developer-focused. Some of these would be different if I was doing it for survivalists.

Adam Stacoviak: Half of them are not...

Jerod Santo: It sounds like 10x survivalist.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, half of them are just like random advice for anybody who's going out into the woods.

Mat Ryer: Be okay for things to not work out.

Jerod Santo: At least what survivalists you know what a 10x means... Because they're just gonna survive 10 times longer.

Adam Stacoviak: That's right.

Jerod Santo: With developer, we have these questions about what 10x means. But with survivalists it's quantitative.

Adam Stacoviak: I've watched enough, Jerod. I would say survivalist is not how long you survive, it's how much you thrive. Because surviving is not thriving, you know...

Jerod Santo: That's a thrivist. Completely different thing.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, that's the truth.

Mat Ryer: Thrivalist.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] I'm always more of a thrivalist.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, the thrivalists are the next-level survivalists. They're the ones that are like -- they're not just going out there to survive, they're out there to live.

Jerod Santo: That's right.

Mat Ryer: They're stranded, but they've got like a four-pack.

Adam Stacoviak: Do they have shoes on? Are they wearing underwear made by themselves? Do they have hats?

Mat Ryer: Yup...

Jerod Santo: Adam asks the hard questions. "Do they have hats?"

Adam Stacoviak: Well, do they make-shift themselves a hat, because they're walking in the sun? They're doing distance...

Jerod Santo: Is that thriving, or is that surviving?

Adam Stacoviak: I would say so, yeah... I mean, because if you've seen enough of these shows, you see people who are like really sucking wind, and they're basically eaten lizards, man.

Jerod Santo: Or worse.

Adam Stacoviak: They're eating lizards and crying, and wishing for some shade. Then somebody else has got clothes manufactured. They've got makeshift shoes. They've got a an entire campus they've built because they're just thriving. And they've got not just meat, but a stockpile of jerky, because they've been smoking it.

Jerod Santo: And meanwhile, their competition is drinking wood milk.

Adam Stacoviak: That's right.

Jerod Santo: And that's not thriving, that's survivalism.

Adam Stacoviak: They're out there trying to get the milk from the wood.

Mat Ryer: I think maple syrup could be -- it's not milk, but it's interesting...

Adam Stacoviak: That's sap.

Jerod Santo: You think it tastes good, or what's your point?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, it tastes alright, yeah.

Jerod Santo: Alright. What's our next number? Let me guess. Let me guess. Breathe...

Mat Ryer: No, I forgot that one, actually. But you should do that. I didn't put it on the list. But this isn't like instructions -- these are just things I do.

Jerod Santo: These are 10 tips to be a 10x developer.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Jerod Santo: And number four was water.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, just - I had just written down water, I mean...

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Alright, let's get through this...

Mat Ryer: I think you need it though, don't you?

Adam Stacoviak: It isn't necessary. It's implied though, really.

Jerod Santo: Not on Mat's list it's not. It's explicit.

Mat Ryer: That's how important it is. But then you do bring a good point about breathing.

Adam Stacoviak: What was three again? Is it really breathing?

Jerod Santo: We haven't heard three.

Adam Stacoviak: Gosh...!

Jerod Santo: He won't reveal his top three. Mat Ryer's top three survival tips...

Mat Ryer: [29:54] Okay, it's the top three now. Not survival tips. These are thrivalists, if you want to be an X 10 developer. Number three - keep things simple. Really actually do keep things simple. One of the things that slows us down - this is a real one. One of the things that really slows us down, because things are complicated to do, and we build a lot of that complexity ourselves. So avoid doing it for as long as you can, and take on the hit later of having to go and refactor stuff, because you do it when you're in a position where you really understand it.

It's not to say don't design, and obviously, there's loads of things that you can move at the speed of light before... But when it comes to actually doing things and building it and making decisions, like about what dependencies you bring in, about what packages you're using, what features you're going after, what problems you're trying to solve - the more complex that is, the harder everything is. So there's a genuine tip for how to do - it's really about focus. Keep things simple. Don't overdo it. Don't let this scope creep. If it's going to creep, creep it smaller, if you can.

Jerod Santo: Small creeps are better than big creeps.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, they're easier to deal with.

Adam Stacoviak: That one I can agree with. Water, I can agree with, but it's sort of implied.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, this is a good one.

Mat Ryer: Pen and paper you don't agree with? Do you write things down when you're sketching ideas, like if you're thinking about something technical?

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, yeah... Not writing though. Usually, it's -- I mean, yeah, digital notes are better for me. So I take lots of notes in different places, stuff like that. So I've got an idea page just in Obsidian. It's just full of ideas.

Mat Ryer: Right. Like what?

Adam Stacoviak: Just ideas for like how to grow, how to do different things, fun things to do...

Jerod Santo: Open up the idea page.

Mat Ryer: Just read them all off.

Jerod Santo: Let's hear some ideas.

Adam Stacoviak: Gosh... Alright.

Jerod Santo: Mat and I can critique your ideas here. This will be fun.

Mat Ryer: We should be angel and devil, Jerod. One of us should be --

Jerod Santo: Oh, okay.

Adam Stacoviak: But Adam can't know which is which.

Jerod Santo: Okay. And we'll switch each time around.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. So don't look, Adam, at the screen. Jerod and I will decide.

Jerod Santo: Okay.

Mat Ryer: Jerod, I'm going to point to the devil, okay?

Jerod Santo: Point up or down.

Mat Ryer: I'm going to point to the devil.

Jerod Santo: [unintelligible 00:31:57.02] Down is the devil. Okay, me.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but that's revealed it.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Well, if you're pointing...

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but he can't see. I'm doing it so only visually you can see. He can't hear it.

Jerod Santo: He's sitting right there.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but close your eyes, Adam. We're going to just decide. Right. Jerod, what's the up and down system? You can't change the system halfway through.

Jerod Santo: Devil's down and angel is up.

Mat Ryer: Okay.

Adam Stacoviak: These are all bad ideas. Holy moly. Let me get to my good ideas page here...

Jerod Santo: Oh... He's his own devil.

Mat Ryer: Alright, let's do a good cop/bad cop then, if we want to leave theology out of it.

Jerod Santo: Okay. Point at the good cop.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Okay, ready?

Jerod Santo: Yeah. Got it.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, these ideas are pretty sparse. Okay, maybe I do need paper and pen. So some of these ideas are a little old... They seem to be pretty terrible ideas, I'm kind of embarrassed to even share really any of them...

Jerod Santo: Now that they're coming up to scrutiny -- well, pick one that you like.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, the one I really liked was -- these are all really bad ideas...

Mat Ryer: No such thing.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] No such thing. Let's hear it.

Adam Stacoviak: I'm gonna start with what I think might be the best idea in here... And Jerod, I shared this with you before, but this is sort of against the grain, because we're trying to like keep it simple too, with our network, and not grow by too many podcasts. So I thought if ever we did a gaming podcast, or a gaming-friendly podcast, or a casual pod about games and gaming, it'd be cool if it was called High Score.

Mat Ryer: Hmm.

Jerod Santo: I'm loving this idea.

Adam Stacoviak: It wasn't too much. I was like "That's a cool name." If we did a show on games or casual gaming... Because I'm not a gamer per se. I've played games, I play games, and I will play games, you know?

Jerod Santo: [laughs] But he's not a gamer.

Adam Stacoviak: Not like, you know, Mike McQuaid, for example. He seemed to be way more into like A-list games.

Jerod Santo: Well, there's like hardcore gamers, and there's casual gamers...

Adam Stacoviak: Yes, precisely.

Jerod Santo: There's like ex gamers, aspirational gamers...

Mat Ryer: You guys sure say gamers a lot for a couple of guys who claim not to be gamers, guys...

Jerod Santo: I didn't make any claims over here...

Mat Ryer: Are you a gamer, Jerod?

Jerod Santo: I like games...

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Okay. Likes games... I'll just write down "Likes games."

Adam Stacoviak: Here's another one I want to do at some point... And this is kind of like - people have done this one though, so I probably wouldn't do it... And I wrote this down probably forever ago, before people were doing this more often. In particular, Network Chuck. He's done this. He's a coffee guy.

Mat Ryer: [34:10] Is it gonna be "Something-something-something. That's the tweet"?

Adam Stacoviak: No, not at all.

Mat Ryer: Oh... Because that's a classic now.

Jerod Santo: Oh, here's an idea... Twitter threads. Is that it? Did I guess it?

Adam Stacoviak: No, no, no. It's nowhere near Twitter. It is "Work with a coffee brand to create a hacker coffee blend." So Mat, since you said number one was coffee for you, this is up your alley. We can call this "Blend 10x."

Jerod Santo: I'm loving this idea.

Mat Ryer: 10x. For developers.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah. We put that in our merch store... We've chosen the -- maybe we get a couple of different... You know, whatever. It's kind of cool.

Mat Ryer: Maybe we could find a doctor to actually claim that it somehow makes you a better developer. I mean, we won't be able to find one of them in the UK, but definitely in the US.

Jerod Santo: Yeah. You pay them enough, they'll say anything.

Adam Stacoviak: There's scientific proof about caffeine, inhibitors, and stuff like that with your brain.

Jerod Santo: We could have "10 out of 10 developers recommend", you know?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, exactly. We just ask 10, and any that don't say so, we kick them out.

Adam Stacoviak: So this one's actually in the works, to some degree, this idea... "Create coding albums/mixes with Breakmaster", which we've done; we're kind of doing that behind the scenes... To put on YouTube. Like, music that people can program to. A 10-hour mix, just a jam session. And have many of them, many tracks. And Breakmaster is working on this... But that wasn't my idea, but we're working on it.

Mat Ryer: It could be called Coda

Adam Stacoviak: Coda?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, just like the end bit of a song. Well, you know, just one idea. Pop it on the list.

Adam Stacoviak: Let me add this here to the list. It's unique and different, you know?

Mat Ryer: But no, that's a great idea, because you've got to find it to get in your zone, haven't you? And sometimes, a way to do that is music. I sometimes listen to French songs, because I can't understand what they're saying... And it still sounds beautiful, but I'm not distracted by it, because it just sounds like a nonsense to me.

Jerod Santo: I'm with you, I can't have lyrics while I'm working... But I like music. So if it's lyrics in somebody else's tongue that I don't speak, I'm fine with it. It sounds like another instrument.

Adam Stacoviak: Here's one you actually might like, Jerod. I never told you this one... And it's almost good.

Mat Ryer: Fire Jerod. [laughs]

Jerod Santo: Am I still the good cop? I can't remember.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, you're good cop, yeah. I forgot to be horrible.

Jerod Santo: Okay, I have to like this...

Adam Stacoviak: I'm gonna read it verbatim. "It's a live page powered by our "Recommended episodes." So you go there --

Jerod Santo: Why is it in quotes? Because they're not actually recommended?

Adam Stacoviak: I don't know...

Jerod Santo: [laughs]

Adam Stacoviak: Itt means something. "Yeah, it's recommended." Well, these are all recommended... Right?

Jerod Santo: Okay... A live page powered by our recommended episodes. What happens at this page?

Adam Stacoviak: Right. So you go there -- so if you just want to listen to good tracks from us, good episodes, past, present, future. It's a cool-looking page, it's got a live radio UI, it's got some soft, cool visuals... It's streaming text of our news feed, which doesn't exist anymore... Tweets, clips... It's a place to go to get good stuff right now.

Jerod Santo: I see.

Adam Stacoviak: And it's powered by our Recommended page. That's a half-baked idea. I often bring half-baked or not well thought through ideas to Jerod, and together we yin and we yang that thing. Or as they say on Silicon Valley, Yin and Yan.

Mat Ryer: Right. I like that idea. I think you could also go the other way, because there's an audience for those episodes that really don't work... Awkward, argumentative... You know, when it's like, oh, there's tension, or it's just silence... You know, people are just not feeling it, or it's nervous... You know, those shows.

Jerod Santo: Least recommended.

Mat Ryer: Pop them on. I love those. They're so...

Jerod Santo: Awkward.

Mat Ryer: I can't get enough to listen to them.

Adam Stacoviak: Is he joking with us? I can't tell.

Jerod Santo: Well, he does uncomfortable things...

Mat Ryer: Oh, they're amazing. I love those embarrassing ones.

Jerod Santo: [37:49] So I will say this... I'm not going to name the podcast, the episode number or the guest, but I will say that we have had an episode of one of our podcasts where a single question asked by the interviewer spawned a response that lasted 18 minutes.

Adam Stacoviak: I know the podcast, not the episode number. I've tried to forget it.

Jerod Santo: So if you like that kind of stuff, we just have one of those. But can you imagine? Somebody asks you something and you answer for 18 minutes... That for us is a record.

Adam Stacoviak: This one we're doing, Jerod. This idea here is --

Jerod Santo: The bad shows idea?

Adam Stacoviak: No, no, this one I'm about to read to you.

Jerod Santo: I thought you meant this episode was gonna be on the bad show idea.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, I was done listening to that, so I was just gonna move on.

Mat Ryer: Adam, we need a little bell or something when you're switching ideas, because we don't know when one idea starts and the other one ends.

Adam Stacoviak: Here we go, changing the idea right now. This one is "Yearly Plus Plus members get T's", which we've wanted to do for a while. Special T-shirts. And then also a personal email from one of us, and ask them one or two questions, a minute or two answering them... Listen, share on Twitter... I don't know; interact, essentially.

Mat Ryer: Nice.

Adam Stacoviak: We're kind of doing that one, except for the yearly members getting T's. Talk to your users, basically.

Jerod Santo: I email all of our members.

Adam Stacoviak: I know, that's why I said that. We're doing this one. We're half-doing this one. We didn't give them a T-shirt, but...

Jerod Santo: We don't give them T-shirts, but we do give them emails, which are equal value of a T-shirt, I think. [Changelog Plus Plus. It's better.]

Adam Stacoviak: I do not disagree. I'm done. That's it. That's the best of the bad ideas.

Jerod Santo: Alright... Not so bad. You're just all self-conscious. I think those are some good ideas in there. But I am having to say that because Mat made me the good cop, so I was forced to enjoy all of your ideas...

Adam Stacoviak: Give us two, Mat. Give us number two.

Mat Ryer: Okay, number two just says "If you can't love yourself, how the hell are you gonna love anybody else?"

Adam Stacoviak: Oh my gosh, Mat...

Mat Ryer: This is a RuPaul quote, but... Being polite to people doesn't cost anything. Being nice, being kind... It's a clich茅 for a reason. Give you a quick example - recently, I saw a guy outside who was carrying a little bag of poop, but he didn't have a dog around him. I didn't see a dog. So I was still nice to him. I just said "Good morning", and then I just crossed the road and just went a different way.

Jerod Santo: [laughs]

Adam Stacoviak: This segment on Twitter -- or on YouTube. We're gonna put this out. They're gonna watch my face react to your number two. And I'm gonna be saying -- like, my face just is like in disbelief that that's number two.

Jerod Santo: Are you saying that how Mat reacted to that guy is number two?

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, that'd be good, too. That's a good pun, thank you.

Mat Ryer: No, that's bad pun.

Adam Stacoviak: That was an unintended pun. That was not intentional. But - yeah, that's funny that this is number two in your examples.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, that's just a coincidence.

Adam Stacoviak: Are you being serious, Mat, on this one?

Jerod Santo: About the poo story?

Adam Stacoviak: No, about this being number two. This is a 10x tip?

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: We're almost at number one.

Mat Ryer: Be kind to people. You'd be shocked what you can achieve.

Jerod Santo: Was it dog poo in the bag?

Mat Ryer: I hope so, Jerod. I hope so.

Jerod Santo: So this is about giving people the benefit of the doubt, you know? You're being gracious to this man, and assuming that it was dog poo. I get it... It's a weird example, I'm not gonna lie. It's a weird story to tell to just thousands of people. We'd never had to hear that story, but now we all know about it.

Adam Stacoviak: It's possible he had some Go code in that bag.

Mat Ryer: Oh, come on...

Jerod Santo: That wouldn't be poo... If you asked him where he was going, he might even say...

Adam Stacoviak: Dan-Tan! Dan-Tan! Yes...!

Mat Ryer: [laughs] He's going Dan-Tan!

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, my gosh.

Jerod Santo: Okay, number one. Lots of pressure here. It has to be good. It can't be as bad as number two.

Mat Ryer: Number one... Vitamin D.

Jerod Santo: Excuse me?

Mat Ryer: Vitamin D. Take it as a supplement.

Jerod Santo: [laughs]

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, my gosh...

Mat Ryer: Most of the supplements I don't really take. If you're in a country like in the UK in the winter months, you will not get enough vitamin D from the sunlight alone.

Jerod Santo: Right.

Mat Ryer: A lot of people think you can't really get it from the sunlight, safely anyway... So supplements seems to be the

safest.

Jerod Santo: A lot of people think you can't get it from supplements.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but do your own research, definitely. But...

Adam Stacoviak: I will concur with this one... Because a lot of people are vitamin D deficient. Almost everyone is in modern society, because of just modern society. And for sure, taking a supplement. Now, I would also say, take it with the vitamin K2.

Jerod Santo: Is that K as well, vitamin K as well?

Adam Stacoviak: No, it's called K2. It's like B12, K2, you know...

Mat Ryer: [42:10] But hang on, you're not one of these people that just believes anything, are you? [laughter] I don't know how real we should take that. Are you reliable? Just objectively...

Jerod Santo: I will just say, blanket statement - we do not have medical advice here on Changelog podcasts. Consult your local doctor.

Adam Stacoviak: Let me see if I can find the science here. So there's vitamin D... Yeah, here we go. Google this - vitamin D and K2. You google that and you find what it says. It says "Should vitamin D and K2 be taken together? Vitamin D should therefore always be taken in combination with K2, because the vitamins work together to synergistically", I'm not making this up, "and ensure that Calcium obtained from food is deposited into the bones, and not the arteries." It activates the D.

Mat Ryer: Well, hold on... What did you search for though, Adam?

Adam Stacoviak: Vitamin D and K2.

Mat Ryer: Well, obviously you're going to find a website that says that. That's what searching is.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, I know this. I'm trying to find the information. I already know this though. My doctor told me this. So I take K2 and vitamin D together.

Mat Ryer: So ask your doctor if that's safe for you.

Jerod Santo: As well as vitamin D.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, vitamin. That's how I say it. How do you say it, Jerod?

Jerod Santo: Vitamin.

Mat Ryer: Are you sure you're not just saying it how I've said it though? Because I think I was the first one to say this, and I've said it in a British way.

Jerod Santo: I say vitamin, 100%. I don't know how else you could say vitamin. But when I'm referring to vitamins, I say vitamin. But when I'm asked how to say vitamin, I just say vitamin.

Mat Ryer: There we go, he's walked it back.

Adam Stacoviak: I'll tell you how we say it here in Texas. "You're taking them vitamins over there...?! Them magic pills...?"

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Here's what I love, here's what I love... It's that Mat confidently says that his top tip, his number one tip for being a 10x developer is to take vitamin D. And then Adam says "Also take vitamin K2", and Mat says "If you believe anything, you'll just take anybody's advice on the internet." You just gave a top tip here, Mat. Do you think vitamin D is perhaps a safer vitamin to recommend thank K2? Or because you haven't heard of K2?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, I just haven't heard of that.

Jerod Santo: I just thought it was a movie. Wasn't that where they get stuck on a mountain?

Mat Ryer: K9. It's like a sequel to a K9 movie. I imagine it's a robot cop who is a dog, and this is the sequel. It's called just called K2. 2 Furious. It's just called 2 Furious, because it's just angry. He's not going fast, it's a dog.

Jerod Santo: K2 Furious. Yeah. Fair enough. Alright, well, there you have it. 10 tips...

Mat Ryer: 10 good tips.

Jerod Santo: ...to be a 10x survivalist. Let's now turn to a new segment that we are testing out. A prototype. We like to use Mat to test different things. This one's called Tool Time. This is where we share tools that we have been using lately, or for a long time. They can be critical to our workflows, they can be new to us, but we think they're good, and we have reasons why we think they're good, and we recommend them to other people if they have similar problems in their lives that these tools can potentially help solve. So Mat, you're the guest, so you'll go last night... No, we'll go ahead and let you go first.

Mat Ryer: Oh, no, last is fine.

Jerod Santo: Tool Time. What have you got going?

Mat Ryer: Well, I want to shout out -- this is a classic that I think loads of people already use. I use a Go-specific one, but there are this tool in other languages as well. I'm speaking in this abstracted way just to add some drama... Because it's linting. Linting tools. I love them. I'm quite pedantic, so I'm very particular --

Jerod Santo: I haven't noticed.

Mat Ryer: [45:42] Oh, yeah... So I'm quite particular about things. Like, if there's a bit of smell in the code, it bothers me. And this is unusual for such a 10x-er as myself, because normally that's the trade-off, is like, you're just moving really quickly, and what you produce isn't really high-quality. But actually, the opposite. Keep it high-quality. Linters help you do that. A lot of the Go tools tend to be -- they don't have loads of configuration, so you get a lot of kind of defaults that are pretty sensible as well.

Jerod Santo: What all do you think should go into a linter? And how does that compare with go fmt? Is that a linter? Is it just a formatter? Are these the same things, are these different?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, they're subtly different. I mean, fmt does focus on literally formatting, and there's a Go imports flavor also, which does the formatting and fixes your imports, which is really cool. But the linting things are around like if you just have declared things and haven't used them. Actually, in Go that is an error sometimes.

Jerod Santo: I was gonna say, Go doesn't let you do that, right?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but you can still declare functions that never get called, and things; that's still valid. So linters just help you pick up those edges, and just keep the quality there. By and large, the advice you get from a linter is pretty sound and worth following.

One time, it did suggest something that I didn't like, and I did do a PR to remove it, and it was accepted. This was from the Go linter. So sometimes you do have to roll your sleeves up, and help get the laws changed if something's annoying.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah. Is this so that you can move faster when coding, and think less about the specific details that a linter can catch for you? Or how do you leverage a linter when it comes to efficiency?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, it's really just about having that sense of the quality being high. You know when you have a project and there's loads of warnings, and they're just building up and up?

Jerod Santo: Yeah.

Mat Ryer: And you're just like "Then what's one more warning to that?" It's nothing; you're gonna accept it. If you have no warnings at all, from the beginning, and no lint errors or issues or whatever, then you see a couple, you're gonna want to fix them. And it's just that; it's funny, because I think really to move quickly and to keep moving quickly, your quality has to be really high. This is why I start with tests; your quality is naturally very, very high. And you've got great test coverage, which also helps you move quickly, of course, because now you can make big changes and you know you haven't broken things that were there before. There's only so far you can get just by prototyping before it reaches the point where it's no longer easy to add things, and change things.

So yeah, shout-out to the linters of the world. We love you. You're pedantic, you're awkward, sometimes we hate you... But just like a lot of people, we love you.

Jerod Santo: It's a love/hate relationship. So in Go land - not the IDE, but just the --

Mat Ryer: In the land of Go.

Jerod Santo: Yes... How do you lint? What do you do? So you have go fmt, it runs maybe on Save, or on pre-commit hooks, and then your linter -- tell us actually how it works for you in your day-to-day work.

Mat Ryer: On Save it does the Go imports formatting. So it fixes any imports and formats the code immediately.

Jerod Santo: So that's the linter that you use, is the Go imports plus fmt.

Mat Ryer: No, that's not really the linter; that is just doing formatting and import fixing. Then actually there's a meta linter which you can use...

Jerod Santo: From Meta? From the team at Meta?

Mat Ryer: No, I don't think so. It's just meta because it runs lots of other linters.

Jerod Santo: It operates in the Metaverse?

Mat Ryer: It's, it's golangci-lint from golangci. We'll put the link in the show notes. I use VS Code, and it's just easy to configure. You just turn it on, and then you can configure it to say "Lint the whole package on Save." Because sometimes you change things; like, the linter looks across the whole package, so it's worth running the whole thing each time... And it's just lightning fast. It is on my computer, and probably on most computers... Unless you're on a Raspberry Pi and you've got a -- I don't know. Are you on a Raspberry Pi?

Jerod Santo: Right now?

Mat Ryer: Right now, yeah.

Jerod Santo: Not currently. No, not currently.

Adam Stacoviak: Using right now, recording via a Raspberry Pi?

Mat Ryer: It'd be good, wouldn't it?

Adam Stacoviak: No.

Mat Ryer: No. Not happening. Okay, well... There you go.

Adam Stacoviak: Not today.

Mat Ryer: Lint your stuff. Do you use linters?

Adam Stacoviak: I use a roller. That's how I get rid of it.

Mat Ryer: Oh, yeah.

Jerod Santo: There is a linter for Elixir that I set up on our project and I used for a little while, and it just got too annoying, so I turned it off and I moved on.

Mat Ryer: [50:14] What kind of things was it saying? Just like "You suck! Why would you do this? Learn this!"

Jerod Santo: Yeah, mostly those things.

Mat Ryer: That's not very nice, is it?

Jerod Santo: I just don't want to hear about it when my code is bad. No, mostly it was just like its opinions dramatically were different than mine, and it was going to require a lot of configuration. And I probably diverge more from the Elixir kind of conventions, just because I work in isolation a lot, and don't have to do too much working together with other people and playing nice... And so -- it didn't even really bug me, it was just like one more thing that wasn't providing value, and I am a fan of simplicity, and removing things that aren't providing value... And so I just didn't really get the value out of it that it offered. But I think -- I'm not against linters by any means, I think I'm with you on pretty much everything you said; I just don't practice what I preach, I guess.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, it's interesting. No, a dramatically different opinion to the linter is quite an interesting place to find yourself. It reminds me of Flat Earthers; they find themselves with dramatically different opinions about some things... But actually spending some time to learn about the shape of the Earth, and other things, might be beneficial. But yeah, it's exactly what happens if it builds up and up.

Adam Stacoviak: Are you a Flat Earther, Mat? You're speaking like you really know the details here.

Jerod Santo: He brings them up a lot though. He likes to talk about Flat Earthers. So he's kind of maybe like not a Flat Earther, but maybe secretly is one. Like, he's kind of obsessed with the whole concept of it... And so we're wondering.

Mat Ryer: Well, I think it's a conspiracy, the Flat Earth...

Jerod Santo: Oh, so you're a conspiracy theorist.

Mat Ryer: ...about the conspiracies, though. I'm a meta conspiracy theorist.

Jerod Santo: Oh, so you work for Meta, and you're a conspiracy theorist. Okay.

Mat Ryer: I think they're all fake. All the conspiracy theories.

Adam Stacoviak: With Meta linter.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, use the Meta linter, yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: Okay. There are some odd anomalies. Here's the one thing... The one thing, not pro Flat Earth, but this is the one thing they say --

Mat Ryer: Ah, it didn't take long. Here we go.

Adam Stacoviak: And this is really strange. And I'm not a Flat Earther, by any means. But I do find it super-strange and I would love to find scientific reasoning to why this is. And they say when you fly a plane, if it was around a circle, or if it was always going like that, you would always have to be edging down. Like, the plane always flies at the same altitude. I just don't understand how that's possible. And I get it, because you'd have to fight gravity to go up... But I'd love a scientific reasoning why a plane has to -- you know, it flies across the curvature of the earth; why it doesn't have to nose down? I really am just stumped by that one. I don't get it.

Jerod Santo: Hm. Interesting. Never thought about that. I would think gravity would be the answer, but I don't know.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. It does rotate down eventually, right? It must, because it's going over.

Adam Stacoviak: No, no, no. They keep the same heading. The things that change -- the rudders; the rudders that change its altitude and whatnot, don't change to maintain the curvature of the Earth. Logically thinking about it, the reason why they don't is probably because of gravity.

Jerod Santo: That's what I was thinking.

Adam Stacoviak: The gravity is the unseen force that forces it to stay where it's sort of at altitude-wise, and never have to adjust, because gravity is always pushing everything down. Like, when you see something fall, it's not because it fell, it's because the air around it was actually lighter. It's interesting how you think about that. Even a balloon, you know?

Mat Ryer: Right.

Jerod Santo: Well, I don't believe that response, because I'm actually anti-grav. I don't know if you guys have heard of this, but...

Adam Stacoviak: Please explain.

Jerod Santo: Well, I just don't believe in gravity.

Adam Stacoviak: Okay.

Mat Ryer: Well, before we get into that, just - the plane is like in the atmosphere; if it's like a fluid, the plane is bouncing on that fluid. It probably is wobbling all the time. It's probably something like that. And then --

Jerod Santo: [53:53] I've been on airplanes, they do wobble quite a bit.

Adam Stacoviak: That's true, yeah.

Mat Ryer: Well, you shouldn't be flying them, Jerod, without your lessons.

Adam Stacoviak: There's no mechanical change for the pilot to say, "Okay, maintain curvature of the Earth adjustments." There's nothing like that whatsoever. But I do think it's probably gravity, and the fact that air pretty much is...

Mat Ryer: Yeah, like a fluid.

Adam Stacoviak: It's similar principles to a liquid, it's just air.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, I would think the atmosphere would have some sort of play on that.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, like a squeeze. Like it's squeezing it. Are you seriously anti-gravity, Jerod?

Jerod Santo: No... ! What do you mean, anti-gravity? I just made that up to be silly.

Adam Stacoviak: Okay, gosh. I was like "Man, what kind of person am I dealing with here this whole time? Anti-gravity?!"

Mat Ryer: If you think about it, in the Einstein's Universe, the mass is warping space-time, and we're falling because of that. And so it's not really a gravity pulling, but it's more that space-time is warped, and we're falling because of that.

The other thing interestingly, is gravity, the word - do you know how we say it also to mean like a big situation, like "the gravity of the situation." That was the original term, and they named the force after that. It was like the gravity of it came later. So that word came first. I thought it was quite interesting.

Jerod Santo: So I actually am anti-grav, because I don't believe in big situations.

Mat Ryer: Right. Yeah. You're just like "Trivial." Always trivial about everything.

Jerod Santo: Everything's trivial. Yeah, there's nothing to it. Alright, Tool Time. Adam, let's move on to you, from antigrav --

Mat Ryer: Whoa, it's tool time....!

Jerod Santo: That's true, we do need a jingle. Should we get Mat to do us a jingle, Tool Time?

Mat Ryer: What key do you want it in?

Adam Stacoviak: Put it in A, for Adam.

Mat Ryer: Alright.

[55:27] It is tool time... It is tool time...

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Not all going to be winners are they?

Jerod Santo: [laughs] We can workshop that one...

Mat Ryer: Yeah, last time I did one, Adam, you were like "Oh, here's some notes." And then you left it in the podcast.

Jerod Santo: That was true.

Mat Ryer: It was an astonishing choice.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah. I think my tool was more of a program, I guess; that kind of thing. And it's oddly 1Password. And I'm really enjoying keeping my SSH keys in 1Password, so that I can biometrically - I use my fingerprint - get into things.

Mat Ryer: Beautiful.

Jerod Santo: Biometrically...

Mat Ryer: Biometrically...

Jerod Santo: Like other people's houses? What kind of things are you getting into?

Adam Stacoviak: Well, one machine in particular - my favorite machine, because I built it - is called Endurance.

Jerod Santo: Endurance...

Adam Stacoviak: And this is both our, I guess, initial ZFS box. It serves many purposes, but I built it to be the Plex machine, but it also does a lot of storage, because I haven't built the second machine yet. So I've got one, I plan to have two. And the second one will be called something else. But yeah, I'm SSH-ing into Linux boxes; Raspberry Pi's, legit Linux boxes, other machines, whatever it might be.

Mat Ryer: Love it.

Adam Stacoviak: And I just do not like to type in passwords. And obviously, you could do keyless by just putting your key, your public key on the other machine. Pretty easy.

Jerod Santo: Right. That's what I'd do.

Adam Stacoviak: But it's even cooler when it's literally you, when you biometrically authenticate the using of the key, which is what it does. 1Password catches it and says, "Hey, you're trying to SSH into the machine. Sure that key pair is over there... But are you you? Because if it is, I'll send the private key and match them up, and get the public key from the machine you think you're going to. Good to go." Biometrically signing into machines with SSH via 1Password.

Mat Ryer: So only you, or somebody with your finger can access that?

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, it's true.

Mat Ryer: Because this is the thing - a lot of people mistake this. You don't just have one password, do you? In fact, you've got loads of different passwords in there.

Adam Stacoviak: Precisely.

Mat Ryer: Do you want to clear this up once and for all for the folks at home?

Adam Stacoviak: For sure, yeah. I mean, I didn't brand the company, but I assume it's because it takes one password to get into the application 1Password. Now, this week when we're talk about passkeys; or actually next week... When the heck is this going out, Jerod?

Jerod Santo: [58:12] This goes out on Friday. So it will go out this Friday; passkeys is already out there in the feed.

Mat Ryer: I could be dead then, when this goes out, if I'm not careful.

Jerod Santo: I could be dead too, although I wouldn't go out then.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, we're not promised tomorrow, that's for sure. Or even later today. I thought about that, when we were in that episode, Jerod. I didn't bring it up because it was kind of anti the goal of the show... But I was like "What happens whenever it is a passwordless world?" Because at that point, 1Password the brand name is kind of obsolete. It's almost like Facebook and Meta, to some degree.

Jerod Santo: My thought on that - because I did consider that; I was like "Wow, they're all about passwords, and now it's just passkeys." But I think the idea is you still -- you lock up all your passkeys with one password, so it's extra secure. Because you're not gonna have a passkey for your 1Password, are you? It's to hold your passkeys, but it doesn't open it with a passkey.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, I think you'd still have to have that something you know, which is --

Jerod Santo: I think you want diversity of authentication techniques. But nonetheless, 1Password is Adam's tool for Tool Time. Now, Mat, we do need a jingle for Tool Time, so I thought maybe you'd give it a go, and see if we can get a jingle.

Mat Ryer: I just did one.

Jerod Santo: Oh, I thought we'd give it a second shot, you know?

Mat Ryer: Oh. Was it rubbish?

Jerod Santo: [laughs] No, but you know, iteration and opportunity. Maybe you could come up with something brand new, that was different, and we could pick --

Adam Stacoviak: I do like how Jerod came at that as if it never happened.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, I wondered if he was doing that or if he's just forgotten.

Adam Stacoviak: I think it's both.

Jerod Santo: I thought maybe we'd have a clean edit stop in case you wanted a second shot at it. But I'm mostly just messing with you...

Mat Ryer: It's not necessarily gonna get any better.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] I just thought I'd give you the opportunity if you wanted a redo.

Mat Ryer: Thank you. No. I think when you listen back and pop a bit of reverb on it, you'll love it.

Adam Stacoviak: Try this... Get your guitar out, Mat. Let's try this. "Tools, tools, tools... Tools, tools, tools... Tools Time." Let's do it.

Jerod Santo: And then do the Tim Allen grunt, you know, from the old show Tool Time. Like, do one of those.

Mat Ryer: Well if you could put one of them on, that'd be great, because I don't really know that. Okay...

[01:00:11.24] Tools... Tools, tools... Tools Time, Tool Time, c'mon, let's go...!"

Adam Stacoviak: That's better.

Mat Ryer: It's a keeper.

Adam Stacoviak: Iteration.

Jerod Santo: That's right.

Adam Stacoviak: Some other tool is iteration.

Jerod Santo: Opportunity. Teamwork makes the jingle work.

Mat Ryer: Adam, you said that you wouldn't name it that, 1Password, if you had your way. What would you name it?

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, I didn't say I wouldn't name it that. I said I wonder what will happen when they're passwordless. But I think Jerod cleared it up. So I don't disagree that you would need one password to get into your passkeys when they take over all of passwords. So many words in there - passkeys, passwords, one password... What?!

Mat Ryer: Right. So you're not gonna "yes, and" this segment.

Jerod Santo: I'll "yes, and" it. Here's what I would probably name it. Are you ready?

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Jerod Santo: NoPasswords.

Mat Ryer: Clever. That could be a competitor. We could also have "The pass is always greener on the other side..."

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah. I'd keep working on that one.

Jerod Santo: PassGas...

Adam Stacoviak: Gosh, Jerod...

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Sorry, I was just going with rhyming words there. Could think of anything else. Pass gas.

Mat Ryer: Pass to the Future? That's a good one.

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, that's good.

Mat Ryer: And then I just wrote down "Pass B*****ds" I don't think that's appropriate... You might need to bleep that. I know it could be like the Tarantino movie title spelling. Let's say it was that.

Adam Stacoviak: Mm-hm. Inglorious Passwords. Ooh...

Mat Ryer: Oh, there we go...!

Jerod Santo: I like that. But wait, there aren't any passwords anymore.

Adam Stacoviak: That's right.

Mat Ryer: Exactly.

Jerod Santo: That's the whole point. It has to be Passkeys.

Mat Ryer: Nah, you can't. Just keep it, it's too good.

Adam Stacoviak: It's Passkeys a good name, do you think, Jerod, for this world?

Jerod Santo: [01:01:51.10] It seems like it... Everybody knows what a key is. Everyone knows what a password is. And so it's like "Hey, passkeys." Like, "Okay, I passed my key, instead of my word."

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, that's clever.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but also, Inglorious Passtards is a stroke of genius that -- we shouldn't really just move on this quickly from it. It was that good.

Jerod Santo: Do you want us to have a moment of silence, or what do you want us to do about it?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, because I think Adam's done a good sentence hasn't he? How often does that happen? Let's celebrate it.

Jerod Santo: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: Well...

Jerod Santo: Ta-daa...

Adam Stacoviak: Celebrate it.

Mat Ryer: Okay, that's enough. That's enough. If you add all that silence up, it's one minute.

Jerod Santo: Alright, Mat, play that Tool Time jingle!

Mat Ryer: [laughs]

Jerod Santo: Sorry, I was giving you a chance.

Mat Ryer: You're just not happy.

Jerod Santo: Third time's a charm... Okay, so mine is called Ntfy.sh.

Mat Ryer: Oh, it's interesting.

Jerod Santo: You can find it at ntfy.sh. I assume it's called Ntfy. Tool's called Ntfy.

Mat Ryer: That's like nifty.

Jerod Santo: Actually, maybe it's web 2.0, and they've removed the vowels.

Adam Stacoviak: They have it right there, Jerod, pronounced. Notify.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, I think that might be it. So the tool is called Notify.

Mat Ryer: How is that not nifty? That'd be such a good name for this thing. Oh, my gosh... I'm emailing them right now.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, the T is before the F. That's why, Mat.

Jerod Santo: Well, they did it wrong. They should have done N, F, T, Y. Although then they might be associated with NFTs, and maybe they're trying to stay away from that.

Adam Stacoviak: They could double that up when it fails, or if it does fail, because it'd be like "NFT. Why?"

Jerod Santo: Isn't there a song like that? "N T Y" No? that's a different song.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, there isn't any song as well. I'm trying to email these people.

Adam Stacoviak: I know the song you were thinking of though.

Jerod Santo: What song am I thinking of?

Adam Stacoviak: It's an '80s rap song, I believe. "U N I E Y" or something like that...

Jerod Santo: "U I T T Y"... What is that?

Adam Stacoviak: Stop singing it, Jerod. Listen, I was just listening to the tail end of news, and you literally sang "It's a whole new world", and then you just denied singing A Whole New World. I'm like, "You just sang it."

Jerod Santo: You've never heard me sing, if you think that was me singing.

Mat Ryer: What was it then?

Adam Stacoviak: You put out a tune; that was synonymous with singing.

Mat Ryer: Whose voice was making the noise?

Jerod Santo: I was mimicking the way the song might go.

Mat Ryer: Okay.

Jerod Santo: It's different. Right now I'm just trying to get you guys to understand the song I'm referencing, but I'm not singing it. Don't you dare.

Mat Ryer: You don't have to be an idiot to go on and sing...

Jerod Santo: Okay, anyways... Ntfy, pronounced Notify, is a simple HTTP-based Pub/Sub notification service. This thing is really cool. It allows you to push-notify yourself from disparate scripts, programs, servers, cron jobs... Whatever.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. You name it, baby.

Jerod Santo: As simple as a Curl command. If it has curl on it...

Mat Ryer: As simple as that. It's actually quite a hard command to use.

Jerod Santo: Curl?

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Jerod Santo: Well. You call yourself a 10x-er... It's 100% free software. This is really cool. So I've had this problem for years, where it's like "Hey, I have these different scripts, they're checking on stuff, they're doing stuff, they run at different times..." Mostly they're just quiet, most of the time I don't care. But when something happens, or when something changes, I want to be notified. And it's like "How do I just send myself a simple notification?" I've used email in the past; email is not simple to do from like random scripts. And it has gotten harder and harder. I've used Twitter in the past. I used to have just like a private Twitter bot that I could just publish to, because their API was so awesome back in the day, where you could just post a tweet to a private feed, and then subscribe to that. These things are all pains in the butts.

So the cool thing about this one is like no signup, no login... You just pick a unique string as your key, and you like post to that endpoint. And then you download the app, Android, iOS, or what have you, run it on your desktop, and you just subscribe to that particular endpoint. And whenever it posts, it just push-notifies your phone. As simple as Curl... I mean, it's super-cool.

Mat Ryer: It's really nifty.

Jerod Santo: It's Notify. Of course, you can get more fancy, and there's payments stuff, and you can have sign-ins, and more security, and there's all sorts of features. It's built by, I believe, one person.

Adam Stacoviak: Philip C. Heckle.

Jerod Santo: [01:06:04.02] Yeah. And so I want to get him on an interview and talk to him about how it's all built out, and stuff, just because it's one of these things where I think he's really, for me, drilled some key aspects of developer experience, where I'm like -- I started using it, it just worked... I can say some other things about the way it works that I think plays into that, but I just want to open it up for you guys to talk about this Notify.sh. Pretty cool tool. What do you think?

Adam Stacoviak: I think if he came on the show, there would be one word I would associate with it, Jerod, when Philip comes on. In song form, I would say "Y N I T Y."

Jerod Santo: Oh, that's it! He found it.

Adam Stacoviak: Q, Queen Latifah.

[01:06:41.10] But don't you be calling me out my name

I bring wrath to those who disrespect me like a dame

That's why I'm talkin', one day I was walkin' down the block

I had my cutoff shorts on, right, 'cause it was crazy hot

I walked past these dudes, when they passed me

One of 'em felt my booty, he was nasty...

Jerod Santo: Yeah, Queen Latifah. Okay. What year was that?

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, Gosh, I mean, she was...

Jerod Santo: I thought you still had it open. Nevermind. Not a big deal.

Adam Stacoviak: I do. I don't know what year it is, though. It doesn't say that. '80s, for sure. I mean, when she was rapping... Late '80s maybe. Early '90s, potentially.

Jerod Santo: Mat, do you know the song?

Mat Ryer: No, I don't know that song.

Jerod Santo: You were around... 1993.

Adam Stacoviak: Okay. There you go.

Mat Ryer: Should we put it in the show notes?

Jerod Santo: U.N.I.T.Y. is a song by American hip hop artist Queen Latifah from her third studio album, Black Reign. That's R-E-I-G-N, like the queen she is... Get it? That's a good one.

Mat Ryer: Oh, because she's a queen, isn't she?

Jerod Santo: Yeah.

Mat Ryer: We do have a monarchy. Is she actually -- it's treasonous to say that. Is she actually a monarch?

Jerod Santo: Well, you can take that up with Queen Latifah.

Adam Stacoviak: Let me ask you a question...

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: What is Queen Latifah's real name?

Mat Ryer: Queen Latifah. Double-bluff. That's really a name. That's my final answer. Lock it in.

Adam Stacoviak: I don't think it's known by the public. I heard this recently...

Jerod Santo: Oh. So you don't know what her name is.

Adam Stacoviak: I don't know her name, no. But I don't think many people do, if they do. They must know her personally.

Jerod Santo: You teed it up like it was trivia for us... Her name is Dana Elaine Owens. Born March 18th, 1970.

Adam Stacoviak: That's her real name? Just like that, one Google away?

Mat Ryer: Yeah...

Jerod Santo: So dear listener, I would not eat K2 if I were you at this point. I would avoid that, with my vitamin D...

Adam Stacoviak: Read the research, okay?

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Do your own research, but not like --

Jerod Santo: I did. It was one google away. Or Wikipedia page. It says Dana Elaine Owens.

Mat Ryer: No, I mean the research about the vitamins. I don't want to be liable for this.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, Dana, good job being a queen, and a latifah. We love your music. It's amazing.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: I recall listening to Queen Latifah way back in the day, man... Yeah, for sure. U.N.I.T.Y.

Jerod Santo: That's the Unity.

Adam Stacoviak: It's the best. And so Philip will come on and unify our minds around Notify, and not Nifty. So Jerod, when you use this tool, like --

Jerod Santo: Ntfy...

Adam Stacoviak: Give me an example recently of how it's useful for you. What were you doing that you needed this? Give me like the DevX version of how this worked out for you to be a solo Dev, getting this feedback loop.

Jerod Santo: Yes. So I guess shout out-to our Slack community who pointed this tool to me. I did put out some posts on socials, like "Hey, what's a good way to just send yourself a push notification from a script nowadays?" And there's another one called Pushover.net, that I think Lobsters uses for their community push notifications.

Adam Stacoviak: Also a good name, Pushover.

Jerod Santo: Yeah. I think Pushover looks cool as well. Really, just the one that got me was "Oh, no signup. Just post to the endpoint." It's like "That's cool." No auth, I don't have to worry about credentials, and even like an auth header, or anything. I just post to an endpoint. So that's easy for you to just play with.

[01:09:36.03] My initial use case for this was I have a -- I'm on the UniFi networking things, and I use Next DNS, which is another cool tool that I will do a show on here at some point. Next DNS is the new firewall for the modern internet. This is like having a Raspberry Pi as a service, where they run all the things, and they manage the lists, and they add on features... Lots of really cool stuff, and super-cheap. It's like 20 bucks a year to have that as a service. But you have to point your Dream Machine Pro, if you're on this networking setup I have; that's like my router. I have to point it at their DNS to distribute their DNS to my network... Which works great. You just install their little command line tool onto your UniFi, or onto your UDM Pro, and it grabs the DNS correctly, and it uses Next DNS' DNS instead of Google, or CloudFlare, or whatever else; you'd be using your local ISP. And it uses that to block ads, trackers, you can have privacy, you can have security, blah, blah, blah, blah. All at the DNS level. The issue with it is, is that sometimes my UDM Pro would just stop using their DNS.

Mat Ryer: Oh. Why?

Jerod Santo: I don't know why, actually. I think maybe a software update that like disables the command line... Because the way you install it, you just SSH in, and then you install their little deal, and it runs. And then it just stopped working. I didn't notice for a couple of months. And I thought, "You know what would be great? If I could just know when that happens." Because it's easy to fix. But if I don't know about it, now I'm unprotected and I don't realize it, right? So what I wanted was a way of being notified by Next DNS when my stuff is no longer using them. And they don't provide that as a service, but they do provide an API that you can just query and get your stats and stuff, and know if you're still using the device.

And so I just scripted up a thing that just checks their API every half hour, it just runs off my laptop... It doesn't have to be running like a server nonstop. It just has to run frequently. And it just checks Next DNS' API and says, "Hey, are we still using you?" And they say "Yes." And it does nothing. And then except for that one time when they say "No, you're not using me anymore." Then they just push-notify me. It says, "Hey, you're no longer using Next DNS", and I can go there and fix it. So that's my use case. But that's just one. There's tons of little things.

Mat Ryer: I love the sound of that developer experience. By the way, it was getting a bit like -- wasn't it, Adam? ...like being stuck with the boring guy at the party.

Adam Stacoviak: For a bit there, yeah. I was like "Let's move on."

Jerod Santo: Dang, guys... You asked.

Adam Stacoviak: I'm kidding. I was just agreeing with Mat.

Mat Ryer: I was also kidding, but...

Adam Stacoviak: So it integrates with -- you install a package, Jerod, on the UDM PRO?

Mat Ryer: It's just a POST, an HTTP POST.

Adam Stacoviak: No, no, to configure it, to use DNS, the UDM Pro.

Jerod Santo: Yes, there's different ways you can set up your network, and that's just the suggested one, when you have access to the router, and you can--

Adam Stacoviak: What are the other routes? I mean, could you just point to DNS servers? Because that would be the Easy button there.

Jerod Santo: You can... You have to -- if your IPv4, they require you to have a... What do you call it? Dynamic, DY DNS? You have to have a dynamic DNS.

Adam Stacoviak: DynDNS, yeah.

Jerod Santo: I don't know, there's some sort of like feedback loop they require. IPv6 they don't require, but for some reason they say my network does not support IPv6, which I've found strange, but didn't really care enough to futz with. So I didn't want to do it; you can also do it on the devices. So the cool thing about that is it protects you on cell networks as well. So you can just install like the Next DNS app on your phone; they are not a sponsor, but they darn near should be. And you can run it -- so you're running cell networks, and you're running Next DNS, and so you're having all the same protection. So that's cool. So you can install it on every individual computer, but we have so many devices on our local network.

Adam Stacoviak: That's painful. You want to do network-wide.

Jerod Santo: And they're coming and going... So I just did it that way. And it works great, until it just stops working.

Mat Ryer: You don't have IP6... So does that mean you're going to miss out on all the new websites that come out? You're just going to only have the ones that are already on IP4? Is that how it works? So you've still got Google and Wikipedia, but brand new websites...

Jerod Santo: No, no... Fancy, new ones?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, there's gonna be loads of new ones coming out.

Jerod Santo: I don't know, I guess I wouldn't know about it. You'd have to tell me what I'm missing out on.

Mat Ryer: You're gonna be left behind, mate. You'll wanna get that upgraded.

Adam Stacoviak: I think he is upgraded to the point where you could be. I think UniFi's pretty much on the edge of what's supported. I'm surprised by that too, but...

Jerod Santo: Yeah, and it could be just a configuration on the router... But again, it's like a yak shave, right? Like, this doesn't work, so I'm going down this rabbit trail. Oh, that doesn't work, so I have to do this other thing. I didn't want to shave the yak, I just wanted it to work.

Mat Ryer: [01:14:05.04] What you want is a good developer experience like Ntfy when you're just posting -- it's just a command, it's just an HTTP POST, and that's something you can use. That developer experience, I think, is really important. And this is part of, I think, what makes the tools good; tools that we pick, they have usually a good developer experience when we're developers. And I think that's something that, when people just write tools, they don't spend enough time thinking about like making that sort of 10x experience for people. I.e. make it just perfect, make it seamless; you shouldn't have to be fighting with config, and things like this.

As an example is something I've built recently. We have an API for this tool that we're building at Grafana, which is this incident management tool... And the API has a client - we built a client, we auto-generated it - that you can use. And in the client, you can switch it to stub mode, so that you can just use it without it reaching out across the internet, and it just gives you canned responses. So it's like built into the tool, it's expecting you to write tests with this, at some point, and making that easy for you to do, in a way where we sort of own the responsibility for making that right, and people can just sort of rely on it.

So it's little things like that, I think, make all the difference. And obviously, a lot of this 10x talk was kind of -- you know, ,I was being quite silly... But if you want to really deliver something that's amazing, spend the time on that polish a little bit, and do less. Have fewer features, but make them really good, and pay attention to that developer experience. It makes such a difference. Most people will just breeze through it, and they won't give it another thought. And in a way, you've succeeded if that happens. But it gives you such confidence when you use the tools, when it's just slick, and it's like a pleasure to use? It makes all the difference.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, I was thinking about that, like what is good DX, and I think one of the things is like something that provides quick wins, and freedom to tinker, without feeling like you're gonna break something or harm something. With Ntfy, why did I pick that over Pushover? Well, I can just start with a Curl post, and see if it works. And I was like "Oh, it works." I can install it on my phone, I can send myself just from the command line... It's kind of fun. You're like "I'm push-notifying random crap." And it has like geeky kind of things, like yeah, you can send emoji, and you can have warnings, and titles, and like that kind of thing that we nerd out on. But that quick win, of like "I'm sending myself and I'm receiving push notification within minutes of finding the service", to me, that's the kind of experience where I'm like "Yeah, I'm gonna keep trying this tool", versus the one that has a little bit of the [unintelligible 01:16:38.08] So I think that's really cool, this idea of just like freedom to tinker.

Mat Ryer: I couldn't agree more. I think also, like you say, a quick win... Give people something for the investment they've just made. It's a big ask to get people to download something that you've built, or try a tool that you're building. So reward them every step that you can, somehow. And have that as part of the design when you're thinking about what this is. That makes a big difference, for sure. And it's like, people invest, and then you give them something in return that's valuable to them. They will then, in turn, invest more often, as long as you're getting it right and solving the problems. And then that's really how you build trust with tools, is like, people have invested in making it better, in some way. That's very meaningful. And so it's like, yeah, I think there are a few of these philosophies that just apply to everything we build and that we're thinking about.

Adam Stacoviak: Since we're, I guess, probing potentially for a Next DNS sponsorship in the future, one way they could potentially make the service better is just to have that built-in.

Jerod Santo: That would have been the easiest thing, yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: [01:17:46.15] Because it's not -- I was looking at the documentation, it says "Queries from the UDM itself won't be routed to Next DNS, nor encrypted, due to current system limitation. But all traffic on your network will; all devices on your network will." So it could be like somehow just knowing that it's connected, or that the UDM is respecting the DNS routing; it can be doing a probe every five seconds, I don't know. Whatever makes sense, essentially, and say, "Okay, essentially what you're doing with Ntfy, it's doing on behalf of the service, it's doing it itself."

Jerod Santo: Right. So my code, basically, is just hitting their API, and I can't remember exactly what it's checking for... I'm gonna see it right now. It's saying -- it gets the profile's endpoint, and then... Oh, that's just to get the ID. The actual query count is this analytics endpoint from the last hour. And if there's anything, then I'm fine. If there's zero analytics for the last hour from my profile, now we've got a problem. And that could totally just be a thing that they build for you, and they're like "Yeah, we'll notify you if it's not working."

Now their better UX, I guess, would be it just doesn't break, ever... But some of that's more on my router than on them, I guess, to a certain extent. So points for them for having an API that I can just call, because that got me where I needed to go. So I'm still happy with them, you know... But even happier is if I could have just found in my settings somewhere to put my phone number in, or somewhere where it says -- even an email would have been fine. "Email me when this goes down" would have been cool.

Adam Stacoviak: I don't understand why they're just not letting you configure custom or manual DNS servers, rather than installing something. Like, what is it doing on your network that requires an application, or some sort of package to be installed on your machine? Why can't it just be DNS in the cloud that just knows your Mac ID, or just something that's unique to your -- it could even be a key, a public key.

Mat Ryer: I guess it's valuable that it's internally.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, I just don't want to manage it at the machine level.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, yeah, because... I mean, the Easy button to configure DNS is literally to put in DNS servers. That's the easiest way. And in that case, UniFi OS is always going to respect what you put in your settings to be your desired DNS servers.

Jerod Santo: Right. But when you do that mode, they require a loopback to them, for some reason. Like, you can do that.

Adam Stacoviak: Right. So back to the DX. Yeah, I think they need to better integrate with Unfy.

Jerod Santo: I think because they want to confirm that you are a valid customer of theirs, hitting their DNS servers. And so they want your IP address to be known, and so if you have dynamic DNS -- because your IP address changes unless you pay for a static, right? So then if you've paid for that, you can plug that back into their system and say, "Yes, I'm using your DNS servers, and here's my IP that I'm coming from. It's a dynamic DNS address." And they're fine. But if you don't have that, they don't want you just to use their DNS servers. They want to know that you're a customer, I guess.

Adam Stacoviak: They need Tailscale, because Tailscale's got this figured out. Tailscale is state of the art.

Mat Ryer: Anyways, lovely to talk to you both... I'm just going to talk to some other people at the party as well.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Do we have anything else that we haven't discussed?

Mat Ryer: Well, we said we were going to quickly talk about wired keyboards. Is this a quick time for unpopular opinions?

Jerod Santo: Oh, shoot. Let's do it.

Adam Stacoviak: Two minutes each. Go!

Jingle: [01:20:52.12]

Jerod Santo: As we open up the Unpopular Opinions segment, let's do a quick review of last time's unpopular opinions, and see which ones actually were unpopular. So Adam said, "You should really be habit-stacking."

Mat Ryer: Oh, yeah. This has stayed with me.

Jerod Santo: This was 70% popular on Twitter.

Mat Ryer: Who doesn't think that that's a good idea...?

Jerod Santo: I know... And on Mastodon it was... Loading slower, because it's federated. 80% popular. Neither poll pointed very many votes, because it's kind of not too controversial, I would say. Just like good advice.

Mat Ryer: This one has stayed with me. I think about this a lot, and I've started doing it --

Jerod Santo: Do you habit-stack now? Are you a convert?

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Particularly, you mentioned in the example coffee. And by the way, if you don't know what this is, go back, and - Jerod will tell you which episode it is. Go and listen to this. It's worth listening to it. Some good tips.

Jerod Santo: [01:22:06.21] Episode 526.

Mat Ryer: 526, baby. The old classic. Put that in your ears, I think...

Adam Stacoviak: Okay.

Mat Ryer: But the coffee one... While coffee is being made - I have a robot make my coffee; I'm embracing the future - I will go and do something else. Tidy something up, or make a different mess.

Jerod Santo: Love it. I habit-stack as well. Whenever I'm taking my vitamin D, I always take K2 also.

Mat Ryer: Oh, there you go. You've converted.

Adam Stacoviak: Just a habit. You're not stacking.

Jerod Santo: I stack them together.

Mat Ryer: Too tightly. If it's stacked too tightly, it becomes one habit.

Adam Stacoviak: Hilarious. Nice. Okay, cool.

Jerod Santo: Mat said "Most people are building software wrong." Here's what's funny about this one... This was not going to be Mat's unpopular opinion. Here's a little bit of a meta game here. Before the show, he actually told us what his opinion was gonna be, and it was something about having plans never works, because something always goes wrong... And during the show, Adam actually leaked that as a sentence...

Adam Stacoviak: Did I?

Jerod Santo: ...and Mat felt like now he couldn't use it as an unpopular opinion. And so instead, he made this one up kind of on the spot. And I thought it was really funny, because you know, his plan didn't go well. Something went wrong, and it ruined his plan.

Mat Ryer: It proves my point.

Jerod Santo: But instead, he said "Most people are building software wrong", which was 64% popular.

Mat Ryer: So it's not unpopular.

Jerod Santo: One person says "It sounds like a cultural problem to me. I've worked on several codebases that had more than 100 million lines of code, that we knew what we were doing, and why it's important." So shout-out to Joseph Winston for an epically large app. That's on Twitter, of course.

Mat Ryer: Tweet us those 100,000 lines. Let's have a look at them.

Jerod Santo: 100 million lines.

Mat Ryer: 100 million lines?!

Jerod Santo: Yes.

Mat Ryer: Is that what he said?

Jerod Santo: That's what he says. Now, he could just be lying. I don't know the guy, but that's what he said. 100 million lines.

Mat Ryer: Where does he work?!

Jerod Santo: You should follow up...

Mat Ryer: GitHub? Is he talking about in its database? That's insane. Wow.

Jerod Santo: Over on Mastodon, 88% of people agree with you.

Mat Ryer: Oh, wow.

Jerod Santo: [unintelligible 01:24:01.06] says "I agree with anything Mat says." So you have a sycophant there.

Mat Ryer: He sounds smart.

Jerod Santo: And then Lzap said "Do y'all even try to make unpopular opinions anymore?"

Mat Ryer: Good point, Lzap. We're not doing a good enough job.

Jerod Santo: And then Jesse from Australia - may or may not exist - says "This is a really boring take. The same as saying, "I could build Twitter in a weekend."

Mat Ryer: Yeah. I could build it in a weekend.

Adam Stacoviak: Hard to please, you know? Hard to please.

Jerod Santo: And yet, most of the people agree with you. Any responses, Mat?

Mat Ryer: Yeah, notice how the real people like me, and then Jesse, this Australian person... They're like "Oh, I don't like him." What an easy thing to say.

Jerod Santo: Clearly a sock puppet.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, because I had to think of it, Jesse. I had to think of it on the spot, because Adam had ruined it earlier, and I'm trying to --

Adam Stacoviak: How did I ruin it? Remind me. Do we have time to explain how I ruined it? Did I do it on purpose? Was it vindictive?

Mat Ryer: You just said it.

Jerod Santo: You know when you have a conversation with somebody and then later on you kind of say a thing that they said?

Adam Stacoviak: Right...

Jerod Santo: You did that, so you just kind of ruined it for an unpopular opinion. It wasn't on purpose...

Mat Ryer: Because you saw it in the notes, and you're like "Oh, I'm gonna get me some of that..." And then you got your little grubby mitts on it and helped yourself to it.

Adam Stacoviak: Okay...

Mat Ryer: So I had to improvise a new one, and it came out rubbish, Jesse, and it wasn't great... But you've got to be prepared to fail, even in public, I think.

Adam Stacoviak: We said this. You said this as part of your tips.

Jerod Santo: That's right.

Adam Stacoviak: Expect failure, basically. I'm paraphrasing your tips.

Jerod Santo: Now, let's talk about automagical for a moment.

Adam Stacoviak: Oh, my gosh...

Mat Ryer: Oh, yeah.

Jerod Santo: Because I was the most unpopular of the three of us, which makes me the winner... Not that anyone's keeping score, but I won by a wide margin... Although 57% of people did agree with me, which is less than you guys, but still more than 50. I also got more votes on mine, so I think it struck more of a chord. That's on Twitter. Over on Mastodon, 50/50. 94 votes on Mastodon.

Mat Ryer: [01:25:54.12] How can it be 50/50 then? I can't be, if it's 94.

Jerod Santo: 94, yeah. You divide that by two.

Mat Ryer: Oh, 47 each? Yeah. Wow.

Jerod Santo: So 50/50 is the least popular that we landed, but none of us were actually unpopular. So maybe we can beat ourselves this time around... Mat, what have you got?

Mat Ryer: We sure can. I've got two. I've got an original one. We did promise we were going to talk about wide keyboards... I'll just say it quickly, just lay my cards on the table... Where are you going with the keyboard? You just have it in the same place, except now it can run out of battery. Just plug it in. That's my unpopular opinion. Wired keyboards are tired. And what's wired, is wired. Sorry, a wireless keyboard is tired...

Jerod Santo: Now, this is going to be unpopular. Spit it out, Mat.

Mat Ryer: Tired, colon. Mechanical, no. Tired, colon, wireless keyboards, wired, colon, wired. Easy.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] That was just a disaster, but I loved every moment of it.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, it was the best.

Mat Ryer: It was. But the editors are going to fix it, aren't they? This whole clip's not going out.

Adam Stacoviak: No, they're not. I have no idea what you're even talking about... But yes. Okay, cool.

Jerod Santo: We actually have an internal rule here at Changelog... Anytime Mat says "The editors are going to fix this", it immediately stays in.

Mat Ryer: Oh...

Jerod Santo: So if you want it out, don't mention it.

Mat Ryer: Should I do my second one, or do you want to talk about keyboards?

Jerod Santo: No. Adam, go ahead.

Adam Stacoviak: He's got two, he says.

Jerod Santo: [laughs] Yeah, well...

Mat Ryer: Well, my second one is "Apple Vision Pro, I think it looks amazing. I'm definitely going to be getting one." What do you think? I mean, come on. They've done a cracking job, it looks like...

Jerod Santo: I agree with you, except for the buying it one.

Adam Stacoviak: We did an episode on this, and I've had time to think... And the thing that has changed my opinion about it is this idea of thinking of it like headphones for your eyes. And I saw this somewhere... I'm trying to look where I found that. It was like a Steve Jobs commercial, essentially. Steve Jobs talked about headphones, and in your own world, and like this is an evolution of headphones. But it's not just headphones, now it's visual, too.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: I think there's a lot to be said there. It's like, when you use headphones, you want to go into your own space, with your own private music, and not disrupt others. And that's kind of where Vision Pro is trying to go, from a consumer standpoint. Now, a business application may be way different, of course, but from a consumer standpoint, it's like headphones plus-plus kind of thing. So I'm not excited about the price tag, but I really do want them. I really do want to enjoy what can be done there. Hopefully, the world gets more vast, I'm sure it would.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. I was surprised by the price. But normally, if you've got a 4k TV, that's 4k shared between both eyeballs. In the Apple Vision Pro you get 4k per eyeball. So both eyeballs each get 4k.

Adam Stacoviak: That's what I want.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, so we're talking -- that's a lot of k's.

Jerod Santo: Yeah, but it's a small screen, because it's right in front of your eye.

Mat Ryer: Even better. It's all condensed; it'll be so sharp.

Jerod Santo: I agree, but in terms of cost... Usually, you think about material costs that go into something. Whereas like an 85-inch 4k TV has a massive screen that has to have 4k across the entire thing, your eyeballs just need these little goggles. I think it's like the 13 cameras, and like, there's just so many sensors in this sucker...

Mat Ryer: What are you worried about?

Jerod Santo: I don't know, I was surprised, because the iPad -- was it the original iPad, I think? It was rumored at $1,000, and came out at $500. And they really kind of wowed everybody with that price point.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. They went the other way with this, didn't they?

Jerod Santo: It wasn't the iPad, because that sounds cheap for the iPad... But anyway, there was a product that was like that. And this one, the rumors were $3,000. So I was thinking "You know what, they're gonna come in at like $2,000 and really wow everybody." And they actually went the other direction, they went more expensive than the rumors, which is rare.

Adam Stacoviak: $1,999 is a good price to start with that, in my opinion.

Jerod Santo: Totally. I might get one at $1,999.

Adam Stacoviak: 2k would be an okay investment for most people. I mean, that's an entertainment center of sorts. It's expensive, of course, but an entertainment device is 2k-worthy. Like, you buy 2k TVs. Not 2k, but you get $2,000 worth of a TV from a TV. It's pretty common.

Jerod Santo: Right. Or K2 TVs.

Adam Stacoviak: [01:30:04.21] Yeah. That's a normal price.

Jerod Santo: Well, the Meta Quest 3 is 500 bucks, and nowhere near as good. But is it seven times better than a Meta Quest 3? I mean, that's the price differential.

Adam Stacoviak: Did you see Zuckerberg on Lex Friedman?

Jerod Santo: I saw a clip, a six-minute clip. He did a standard, like "I'm excited. It really validates things", etc.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, I agree.

Jerod Santo: "They're coming at it from a different angle than us", kind of thing. What else is he gonna say? "I'm crapping my pants..."

Mat Ryer: "All our graphics looks 8-bit compared to this."

Jerod Santo: Right.

Mat Ryer: Quick Quiz...

Jerod Santo: Quiz time?

Jingle: [01:30:38.00]

Mat Ryer: If you've got two 4k screens in your eyeballs, how many total pixels is that? Closest wins. Jerod, we're going to you first. We need an answer, please. How many pixels is two 4k displays?

Jerod Santo: I'm gonna go with 8,000. I know that's wrong.

Mat Ryer: 8,000. Really good guess. It does have an 8,000 in it.

Jerod Santo: Don't give him a hint. I didn't get a hint. Adam?

Adam Stacoviak: 8 million.

Mat Ryer: 8 million. Interesting. Okay. Well, the answer is - two 4k displays, you would have 16,588,800 pixels. 8.2 million per 4k display.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, that's about right.

Jerod Santo: Well, it does not require you to state the size of the display? Because it's an pixels per square inch...

Mat Ryer: Well, it's 4k, ain't it? I thought 4k told you how many pixels it was.

Jerod Santo: Does it? I don't know. I don't know these things. I just figure, a 4k display at different sizes is going to have a different number of -- it's the absolute value of pixels. I don't know, I'm talking out my backside at this point. Go ahead, Adam.

Adam Stacoviak: I think that the Apple Magic Keyboard is hands-down the best keyboard ever created.

Jerod Santo: Wow. Big words. Why?

Adam Stacoviak: It's got this button right there. I put my fingerprint on there, and boom. All things biometric. You find another keyboard, your mechanicals, or whatever -- it misses that. So I wouldn't mind having the traits and the attributes that you have, and if it's cool. If they offered a Touch ID mechanical keyboard, I would say it competes. That feature right there alone is why I would only use this keyboard, and not another.

Mat Ryer: You could have just two connected, and then you just reach over and touch the thing...

Adam Stacoviak: True. And I saw -- who was it?

Mat Ryer: Billy Bob-Thornton?

Adam Stacoviak: No, it was a YouTuber...

Mat Ryer: Morgan Freeman. Oh.

Jerod Santo: Russell Crowe.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, he's big on YouTube.

Adam Stacoviak: No, none of those people. They actually took apart an Apple Magic keyboard and pulled out all the touch ID mechanical parts, like all the hardware and stuff like that, and remade it, and they just made a touch ID button that worked the same.

Mat Ryer: That's cool.

Adam Stacoviak: So I would agree. If they would just sell me just the button, then I would use a mechanical keyboard, or at least be okay with trying other things... But until that happens, this, again, is hands-down the best keyboard ever made. That's it.

Jerod Santo: Wow.

Mat Ryer: That's gonna be unpopular.

Jerod Santo: My keyboard also has one of those buttons, I will just go on record. But it's a laptop keyboard. But it is a keyboard, and it has the button.

Mat Ryer: Is it an Apple one?

Jerod Santo: It's a MacBook Pro.

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Yeah, but they could do it. They could do it on -- I think they're doing it with your phone, aren't they? Like, unlock with your phone, and you can use your face to unlock, and things like this...

Adam Stacoviak: So I've found it. It's Snazzy Labs on YouTube. Snazzy Labs. "I made a tiny touch ID button for Mac." And in this video, he goes through all the steps. He disassembles an Apple Magic Keyboard, pulls out all the innards necessary for Touch ID, pulls it over to a standard device... It looks kind of cool. I think even 3D printed it. It's like many, many steps to do it; a lot of effort. And it works. And it works.

Mat Ryer: [01:34:12.25] That sounds great.

Adam Stacoviak: So Apple's really missing out. They could probably sell me that touch ID thing just standalone.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Jerod Santo: How many would you buy?

Adam Stacoviak: One.

Jerod Santo: Not 10?

Mat Ryer: Would you plug it in, or just have it in your pocket, like your phone? Why don't you just use your phone?

Adam Stacoviak: Well, it would be for the computer, to biometric to it.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, so it'd be USB. Wired or Bluetooth?

Adam Stacoviak: Well, in this case - that's the other cool thing. There's no wires. And this thing doesn't require charging, ever, really.

Jerod Santo: Ever?!

Adam Stacoviak: I mean, maybe once a month... And it's lightning, so I'm already charging other things with it... So it does it all. And it's like, I could just throw this thing across the room, and it would come right back like a boomerang, because it doesn't want to leave me.

Jerod Santo: Oh, man.

Mat Ryer: They would if it had a bouncy the cable on it. Missing a trick.

Adam Stacoviak: The trick really is - here's what makes this keyboard good. It religiously, on a daily basis, takes vitamin D and K2 together. It never misses.

Mat Ryer: It's got both the letters on the -- it's got them, hasn't it? It's got them both; you can see the D and the K. And the 2.

Adam Stacoviak: And therefore, that's why it is, like I said, hands-down, the best keyboard ever.

Mat Ryer: Okay. Yeah. He's concluded it. He's summed it up. And I think that's the sign they move on, ain't it?

Jerod Santo: My opinion is I think Queen Latifah is the greatest queen in human history.

Mat Ryer: The greatest queen in human history.

Jerod Santo: No, I just made that up, because I still have an open tab that says Queen Latifah... I don't think I have a good enough one to share this week.

Mat Ryer: Okay.

Jerod Santo: I'm gonna pass.

Adam Stacoviak: You can't pass...

Jerod Santo: Alright, okay, here's one. Here's one. I'll play the game. I'll play the game.

Mat Ryer: He chooses to play!

Jerod Santo: I think the word "automagical" is an awesome word, and I think that we should all use it more. It's so useful in many circumstances. You can say it when you're trying to hoodwink somebody... You can say when you're just too busy to answer a question, and some non-techie person asks you how something works; you can just say it's automagical. You can put it on your splash page when you're trying to really sell your product as something that's just beyond automation...

Mat Ryer: Yup.

Jerod Santo: There's lots of different ways you can use it, and they're all pretty cool. I think we should continue using it, and actually, I would say we should use it more than we currently do as software developers.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah. That synergizes with how I feel as well.

Jerod Santo: Okay.

Mat Ryer: Yeah, I've just written down some other places you could use it. You could get it put on a cake. You could get it on a T-shirt... And the obvious one, you could actually think it in a dream. It's also another way you could use that word, if you're looking for other ideas.

Adam Stacoviak: You can actually change your last name to Ical.

Mat Ryer: Ooh!

Adam Stacoviak: First name Auto, middle name Magic. And then Ical is your last name. Auto Mag-Ical. That's just your name now.

Jerod Santo: But most of the time people don't use middle names, so it'd be Auto Ical.

Adam Stacoviak: Well, no, no -- that doesn't matter, Jerod. You would require full name. You wouldn't answer or respond. Then, worst-case scenario, they're calling you Auto. It's like "Come on, Auto."

Jerod Santo: And they'd think I work on cars.

Mat Ryer: In your accent, that's a really cool-sounding name, I think.

Adam Stacoviak: Auto?

Mat Ryer: Yeah. To my ear, that sounds cool.

Adam Stacoviak: Say it.

Mat Ryer: Auto. It's not the same.

Adam Stacoviak: Auto...

Mat Ryer: Yeah. Auto. It sounds fake.

Adam Stacoviak: Yeah, [unintelligible 01:37:20.13]

Mat Ryer: It sounds like I'm putting it on.

Jerod Santo: It sounds like a vitamin. Auto.

Mat Ryer: Auto... I can't do it.

Adam Stacoviak: Can you make a song called Automagical, Mat? Is that possible that you can song one more time for us?

Jerod Santo: Oh, this will be how we end the show. Let's do it.

Mat Ryer: Yeah.

Adam Stacoviak: Could you automagically just sing?

Mat Ryer: It's hard, because that doesn't rhyme with lots of words, does it?

Jerod Santo: But Lee rhymes with everything. Automagically...

Mat Ryer: Yeah, but I don't know loads the lee-words.

Jerod Santo: Free, tree...

Adam Stacoviak: We...

Jerod Santo: You and me...

Adam Stacoviak: Just let it be...

Mat Ryer: Okay, yeah. Sorry, yeah. I just need you to just accept cookies again, because I've forgotten.

Jerod Santo: Rejected. Reject all.

Adam Stacoviak: Bye, friends!

Jerod Santo: Bye, friends. [laughs]

Mat Ryer: [01:38:08.02]

I'm looking at you, I'm wondering how you work... If I don't find out soon, maybe I'm gonna go berserk. You don't explain it, I don't know a thing... You say it's something magical, and that makes me want to... Scream... It makes me want to scream...

Automagical. Let it be.