Woot With Friends, Send Me on a Date, Fantasy Anything, and Flowchart Programming
Ep. 11

Woot With Friends, Send Me on a Date, Fantasy Anything, and Flowchart Programming

Episode description

Special thanks to Doyle for joining us on this episode!

00:00:00 - Intro
00:00:44 - Wisdom of the Crowdfund
00:12:02 - Woot With Friends
00:22:29 - Send Me on a Date
00:33:34 - Fantasy Anything
00:42:19 - Flowchart Programming
00:56:45 - Outro

Download transcript (.srt)
0:00

(upbeat music)

0:02

- I'm Scott.

0:05

- I'm Russell.

0:06

- And I'm Leo.

0:07

This is Spitball.

0:08

(upbeat music)

0:10

Welcome to Spitball, the Pitchin' Kitchen,

0:19

where three web weavers empty our heads

0:21

of startup and tech product ideas

0:22

that we have stuck up in there

0:23

so you can all have them for free.

0:25

Anything that we say is yours to keep.

0:27

Scott, who'd you bring with us this week?

0:28

- This week, we have one of my oldest friends

0:31

and former roommate, Doyle.

0:33

- Hey, I didn't know that.

0:34

That's fun.

0:35

- Hey, glad to be here.

0:36

Yeah, yeah, we were for a little bit, yep.

0:38

- Welcome to the show.

0:39

- It was good times.

0:40

- Good times.

0:41

- It was good times.

0:41

Hey, yeah, thanks for having me.

0:42

I'm really excited to be here.

0:43

- Good deal.

0:44

All right, this week I've brought a new game

0:46

for us to try out.

0:47

This week we're gonna be playing Wisdom of the Crowdfund.

0:49

So, in this game, I don't know,

0:51

how familiar are you guys with like history

0:55

of famous Kickstarters and IndieGoGo's?

0:57

Is that a scene that you're in?

0:58

- I have heard of Kickstarter.

1:00

- Oh, good.

1:01

That's good news.

1:02

- Yeah, I know of Exploding Kittens,

1:05

absolutely blowing Kickstarter up,

1:08

followed by, as we were talking about actually

1:10

before the show, Brandon Sanderson,

1:12

following up, blowing up Kickstarter,

1:13

but that's about all I know.

1:15

- Okay, I haven't picked either of those for this game.

1:18

So in this game, we have a series of bizarre Kickstarters

1:23

that have all been successfully funded over the years.

1:26

These are things that you may or may not even think

1:28

should have been funded or backed.

1:30

And we're going to go through line by line here

1:33

and take turns to decide whether or not

1:35

they actually delivered on the product

1:36

that they said they would,

1:38

or if this was a complete sham and scam

1:40

and they never got what they paid for.

1:41

- Love it.

1:42

- And let's start, of course,

1:43

as we do every week with our guest, Doyle.

1:45

I'd like to pitch to you first.

1:46

We have a product here called Slice of Sauce.

1:50

Now this is a no mess slice of ketchup.

1:53

You could go to Kickstarter, back it,

1:54

and Bo's original Slice of Sauce

1:56

was a flavor packed condiment.

1:59

It looked like a single, Kraft singles,

2:02

only it was gelatinous red,

2:05

and it was a slice of ketchup.

2:07

Now that got- - Just ketchup.

2:09

- Just ketchup.

2:10

There was only ketchup to start here.

2:11

That was backed by 677 backers and got $30,000.

2:16

- That's a red flag.

2:17

- So for $30,000, they blew past their goal,

2:19

but yes or no, did it ship?

2:21

- Ooh.

2:22

- So it wasn't whether this exists.

2:24

- It existed?

2:25

It was real.

2:26

It's a thing that happens.

2:27

- It's not like you're making up a Kickstarter.

2:30

- Did it exist in the fact

2:32

that did they actually make something

2:33

or was this just a photo shoot and a scam?

2:35

- Okay, okay, okay.

2:37

I have to say that yes,

2:40

that absolutely it has to be easy enough

2:43

to just with a little bit of pudding mix

2:48

and ketchup onto a baking tray.

2:51

- Put it in a sandwich bag.

2:52

- You are absolutely right.

2:54

Slice of sauce shipped to all backers.

2:56

It was a raving success.

2:59

Not only was it a success,

3:00

it was made by a restaurateur

3:04

in the upper peninsula of Michigan, our home state.

3:07

- Oh, wow.

3:08

- Russell, next the Scarp Laser Razor, 21st century shaving.

3:13

Now this was a razor that looked kind of like

3:16

a safety razor that you'd hold here,

3:18

but instead of a blade, it had a glowing red light

3:21

and was pitched as the first ever razor

3:23

that was powered by a laser, irritation free.

3:27

It got $507,000, 255% of its goal on Indiegogo.

3:32

But yes or no, did it ship to people?

3:35

- Yikes.

3:37

Ah, this is like one of those things

3:39

where you take one of those electric lighters

3:41

and you're like, all right, let's ship it.

3:43

- Yeah, right.

3:44

(laughing)

3:46

- It cuts hair.

3:47

I'm gonna say it's shipped, but everybody asked for a refund.

3:52

- Ah, not only did it not ship,

3:54

Indiegogo suspended the whole campaign

3:56

and did not allow it to complete.

3:58

- Whoa.

3:59

- Why, what was the--

4:01

- They didn't even have a functional prototype,

4:02

which was a rule.

4:03

(laughing)

4:04

- Oh, okay, well that's great.

4:05

- They're just shipping high power lasers

4:06

and saying point them at your face.

4:08

- Yeah, just point it at your face.

4:09

- Guys, I'm 99% sure lasers exist.

4:12

(laughing)

4:14

And if TV's taught me anything, they cut things.

4:16

- Scott.

4:17

- Half a million.

4:18

- I'd like to tell you about my fantastic new product.

4:20

It's called Telespec, T-E-L-L-S-P-E-C with a capital S.

4:25

What's in your food?

4:26

This is a handheld scanner that offered real-time

4:29

food testing, food safety, and food authenticity.

4:33

You point at this scanner at food

4:34

and it'll tell you all kinds of details about it,

4:36

whether or not it's legit.

4:38

Yes or no, did that actually, oh, sorry,

4:40

it got $386,000, almost 400% of its goal, but did it ship?

4:45

- Can you tell me what year?

4:48

- I can.

4:49

- The country of origin.

4:50

- Can you use it in a sentence?

4:51

- Yeah, right.

4:52

- Can you use it in a sentence?

4:53

(laughing)

4:55

- This was, I believe, 2016.

4:57

- It did not ship.

4:58

There's no way they could do that, Dan.

5:00

- They got all the way to the point of firmware

5:02

and manufacturing and stuff, but no, you are correct.

5:05

It did not ship, sorry to say.

5:08

- The FDA would be fixed, right?

5:10

- If this was like the last year, I'd be like, okay, maybe.

5:13

You know, just some chat GPT plugin or whatever.

5:16

- Apparently they shipped something to some people,

5:18

but it was a rebrand of some other product

5:21

that already existed and did not do anything

5:22

for what it said it would.

5:24

Round two, Doyle.

5:25

The iFind, the world's first battery-free item location tag,

5:30

like an AirTag or a TileTracker,

5:32

but it promised to be a battery-free tracker using Bluetooth

5:36

that harnessed radio waves from the air around you

5:39

for just enough energy to--

5:41

- Oh, that's so cool.

5:42

- Yeah, so it had a $25,000 goal.

5:45

It got $546,000.

5:50

It blew past its goal, hundreds and hundreds of percent,

5:53

but did it ship?

5:55

- I'm gonna say no,

5:56

'cause if it did, AirTag would be using it already.

5:58

- Oh, that doesn't sound like the Apple I know.

6:00

- The fundamental technology, right?

6:02

- Yeah, you are absolutely right.

6:03

Nine years ago, it was also suspended by Kickstarter.

6:06

That shit didn't even exist.

6:07

Russell, Bust, CST01, the world's thinnest watch.

6:15

This is a flexible wristwatch that's an E-Ink display,

6:20

and it goes all the way around,

6:21

kind of like a slap bracelet,

6:23

where you put it on and it had just the time

6:25

and nothing else.

6:26

It was a really, really thin wristwatch.

6:28

- How many backers?

6:30

- 7,600 backers that pledged over a million dollars.

6:35

- Oh my gosh.

6:36

Dude, just take everybody that loves Pebble

6:38

and funnel them into this scam.

6:41

Never shipped.

6:44

- Absolutely right, it never shipped.

6:47

Total bust.

6:47

- Russell, are you telling me people

6:48

don't wear their Pebble anymore?

6:49

- Oh no, there's a hardcore community

6:51

that I would still be a part of right now

6:53

if it still existed.

6:54

- For those listening, Russell has four Pebbles on right now.

6:58

- If Fitbit didn't buy Pebble,

7:00

and then Google Fitbit, I'm like, "Oh, you see?"

7:04

- I've got my Pebble time,

7:05

and my Pebble time round right here.

7:07

Our good friend Andrew also has his.

7:09

- It's the GOAT of watches.

7:13

- They still work.

7:14

- Yeah, there's a whole community to make them still work.

7:16

It's great.

7:17

Scott, oh, do I have a pitch for you?

7:19

This is called the Romp Him, H-I-M,

7:23

the world's first male romper.

7:26

This is a repeat Kickstarter.

7:29

- Romp Him?

7:30

- Romp Him, R-O-M-P, capital H-I-M.

7:33

This had 3,000 backers, $353,000 in 2017.

7:38

It's a romper in fun fraternity-looking patterns,

7:44

kind of splotchy, whatever, and it was a romper.

7:48

- Is there the '90s Swish?

7:50

- It's got '90s Swish vibe.

7:51

Jazz, I believe was the name of that band.

7:53

- No, but like, yeah, jazz.

7:54

- It doesn't actually have that, but similar, yeah.

7:57

Yes or no, did it ship?

7:58

- Not a high barrier to entry.

7:59

I say it definitely shipped.

8:01

- It definitely shipped, you're absolutely right.

8:02

- I'm gonna buy one right after this.

8:04

- The Romp Him, an excellent Christmas gift.

8:07

One more round?

8:08

- Let's go.

8:08

- One more. - Let's go again.

8:10

- Doyle, the Smarty Ring.

8:12

This is kind of like an Oura Ring, a couple years back.

8:15

That is the first ring of its kind.

8:18

It was a notification alerts buzz

8:21

in a ring that you wore on your finger

8:23

and it had a tiny OLED screen and not much else.

8:25

It would buzz when you got notifications

8:27

and a little tiny screen promised to be a lot.

8:29

It raised almost $300,000, 744% of its goal of 40,000,

8:34

but did it ship?

8:36

- If it was just the vibration, I would say yes,

8:40

but an OLED screen seems like a lot to put in a ring,

8:43

so I'm gonna say no.

8:44

- You're absolutely right.

8:45

Not only that, they famously started a second campaign

8:48

to raise more money without delivering to the first yet

8:50

and it pissed off a lot of people.

8:52

Bluetooth 4.0 technology.

8:55

It didn't even promise to do a lot.

8:56

I'm surprised it didn't make it.

8:57

The screen, I guess, but yeah, never happened.

9:01

Russell, the Transporter.

9:05

This is a portable hard drive that you can turn

9:08

into a online off-the-cloud storage solution.

9:13

It's kind of like a NAS.

9:14

You put your files on it.

9:15

It sits there.

9:16

It looks like a router, black, sleek-looking thing.

9:18

It's for storing your files on your network.

9:22

It got 1,055 backers and $260,000 way back in 2013.

9:27

- Wait, it's just a wireless portable hard drive?

9:33

- It's a wireless portable hard drive

9:36

that you put your own hard drive in

9:39

and it made a private cloud.

9:41

- That's pretty cool.

9:42

- Wait, what's the name of this product?

9:43

- The Transporter.

9:45

- Oh.

9:46

- You have not heard of this product.

9:48

- I've heard of something.

9:49

I think--

9:50

- I mean, it's like a NAS or a time machine or whatever,

9:53

but it promised quite a bit in a time

9:55

where that was not really super popular yet.

9:58

It got $260,000.

10:00

- I think it happened.

10:02

Hold on, hold on.

10:03

How many gigabytes did it store?

10:05

- No, you bring your own drive.

10:06

- Oh, it's BYOD?

10:08

- They had a version that you could buy.

10:10

They had a version you could buy

10:11

with one terabyte hard drive that it shipped with,

10:14

but the regular version was you bring your own.

10:16

- Oh, well then totally, yes, it happened.

10:19

- Use any capacity mobile drive, it says.

10:21

- Just a USB hub.

10:22

- It did indeed happen.

10:24

You're absolutely right.

10:25

- I like that one.

10:25

- It barely made it through.

10:27

Yeah.

10:28

- Wow.

10:29

- And then lastly, Scott, the M Printer.

10:31

That's a lowercase M, capital P,

10:33

an analog printer for a digital world.

10:36

Small black receipt printer, thermal printer,

10:39

that printed snippets of information

10:41

that they called M Prints.

10:43

You could set it up with your phone

10:45

so that you print out the weather for today

10:47

or a to-do list or your Facebook notifications

10:50

or I don't know, like Sudoku puzzles

10:55

and the headlines for the day.

10:56

You set it on your counter,

10:58

you walk out the door with your receipt full of information,

11:01

like a little mini personalized newspaper.

11:03

- Does your screens not go back?

11:04

- $88,000.

11:05

(laughing)

11:07

- Can I print coupons?

11:08

- Well, this is 2015.

11:09

(laughing)

11:10

Different time in 2015.

11:11

700 backers, $88,000, but did it actually ship?

11:15

- Nintendo did this, right?

11:17

In the late nineties, the Game Boy Printer.

11:19

- The Game Boy Printer, yeah.

11:21

Like that, a little bit bigger.

11:22

- Okay, then this definitely shipped.

11:23

Also, I love that idea.

11:25

Could have used that last week with Sam.

11:27

- It never even shipped.

11:29

- This is a product that you'd think like a thermal printer,

11:33

you put it like an ESP32 on it or something,

11:35

you're good, right?

11:36

You go to AliExpress and you glue a circuit board

11:39

onto a thing that already exists and you're done,

11:40

but nope, they had a whole promise

11:43

and never even shipped a thing.

11:45

- Lame.

11:46

- That--

11:46

- I lost track of our scores.

11:47

(laughing)

11:48

- I just know--

11:49

- I think I won.

11:50

- I think we all win.

11:51

- We all win for finding all of these.

11:52

- I think we all won.

11:54

- Thanks very much to the shitty Kickstarter subreddit

11:58

for some of your inspiration.

11:59

- That's good.

12:00

I like that game, that was a good game.

12:01

- Sweet.

12:02

- All right, Scott, your first this week.

12:03

What do you got for us?

12:04

- All right, here is my half-baked idea.

12:06

Actually, just seeing Doyle

12:08

and being able to interact with him.

12:10

Doyle lives in New York right now

12:11

and I'm currently in Michigan

12:12

and it is nice to be able to catch up with him.

12:14

- It's very nice to be able to catch up with you guys.

12:16

- And so I'm gonna combine that with,

12:18

do you guys remember Woot before they got bought out?

12:21

I don't know, I think Amazon did it.

12:22

So it's a website where it's one product a day

12:25

and you just kind of check it,

12:27

like not like an auction, but just,

12:29

hey, they're selling this today,

12:30

do I want it or no, yay or nay?

12:31

I'm gonna combine that with Doyle being in New York

12:34

with a subscription service.

12:36

So you pay a monthly like 10, 20 bucks a month

12:40

and then maybe once or twice a month,

12:42

an item, you'll get notified

12:44

that this is the item this month.

12:46

You can either buy it for yourself

12:48

or send it to a friend on here

12:51

in order to maintain contact with someone

12:54

or stay in touch or whatnot.

12:55

So say the item this week is a,

12:58

what'd you call it, a round pin?

13:00

Or. (laughs)

13:01

- Yeah.

13:02

- Yeah, I see that and I get notification like,

13:04

hey, you've already paid for this

13:06

'cause you paid for your subscription.

13:07

Who do you wanna send this to?

13:08

And I'd be like, this is for Doyle,

13:10

this is built for Doyle.

13:11

I'm gonna send it to him with a note

13:13

or zero contacts or nothing.

13:15

And that way I can just kind of stay connected with someone.

13:18

That's the idea.

13:19

- Fantastic.

13:20

- Peak consumerism.

13:21

So you can just send random crap to anyone.

13:24

- Absolutely random crap.

13:25

A pair of socks, a bag of dog treats.

13:27

Like whatever.

13:29

But it lets you think about like,

13:31

ah, this really screams Russell right here.

13:34

I'm just gonna send this to Russell.

13:35

- Do you tell it?

13:36

- It's a social network, but physical goods.

13:38

- Yeah, do you tell it who you're sending stuff to

13:40

and then it finds more things like that thing

13:43

for that person?

13:44

- Well, it's always the same item

13:48

for everyone in the whole using the service.

13:50

Like, yeah, this week is this fancy pair

13:53

of Harry Potter socks or whatever.

13:54

Who would like this best?

13:55

Woot was genius because it was selling overstocked stuff.

13:59

They had too much of one thing in the thing

14:01

and how do we get rid of it?

14:02

And there was always limited supply.

14:03

They made a big deal about,

14:04

"Hey, there's only 35% of these are remaining.

14:07

Now's your chance."

14:08

They gave you a lot of FOMO.

14:10

Combining that with also,

14:11

oh, I feel warm and fuzzy 'cause I'm sending a gift.

14:13

It makes a lot of sense.

14:14

- Well, I think the question is what happened to them?

14:15

- They got bought by Amazon.

14:17

- Well, that's what happens to all of us.

14:18

- And then the founder went and started another one.

14:20

- He just did the exact same site again called Meh.

14:22

- Right.

14:23

- Meh, that's right.

14:25

He did.

14:25

- He still exists too.

14:27

- Exactly. - Meh.com.

14:29

- But now when you go to Woot,

14:30

you can get special benefits if you're an Amazon Prime

14:32

member, it's kind of sad.

14:34

- Okay, I wanna throw a loop in this.

14:37

So you know all those Amazon returns,

14:39

those bins, bulk bin buying, okay.

14:43

Turn this into a, every month you spend 20 bucks

14:47

and you can randomly, so like,

14:49

it's straight up like a click shuffle.

14:51

Like if you pick, if like, it's just the bins.

14:53

You know those shopping bins that are stupid cheap?

14:56

- Yeah, yeah, yeah.

14:56

- And you get your item and it's like,

14:58

who, do you want this or do you wanna send it

15:00

to somebody else, right?

15:02

And it's just, you have like three re-rolls

15:05

and then after the third one,

15:06

(laughing)

15:07

you're like, all right, you're stuck with this one.

15:09

We're sending it to your house

15:10

or you're sending it to a friend.

15:11

So it's either like a gag gift or just,

15:14

or it could be a full on like returned Amazon drone,

15:18

coffee roaster, it could go wild card with this, right?

15:21

'Cause you can buy those bulk return bins

15:23

at like a flat rate.

15:24

And so now people are on there subscribing

15:26

for the lucky coffee grinder that costs 150 bucks

15:31

or they're like, I'm just gonna send Doyle a pair of socks.

15:34

(laughing)

15:36

- Who did that famously?

15:37

They have the bag of crap, which is a mystery item.

15:39

- I love the bag of crap.

15:41

- Like 10, 15, 20 years ago,

15:43

whenever it was that they had the Nintendo Wii,

15:44

they went out and sent all their employees to wait in line

15:46

and they all got Wiis.

15:47

And then that was one of the things they sent out

15:49

for the bag of crap when you couldn't buy them anywhere.

15:51

And it was like a really big deal.

15:53

Yeah, you could leverage that FOMO.

15:55

I love it.

15:55

- What I like about your addition, Russell,

15:57

to that is that sort of you found what Woot found.

16:00

Like Woot had found, okay, we have overstocked items

16:02

and we need to get rid of them.

16:04

You're taking like, okay, you have these random boxes

16:07

that Amazon puts together of returned items.

16:09

Like let's turn that into money.

16:11

Because like if you could buy for, what is it?

16:13

Like 300 bucks a box of things that are,

16:17

probably retail worth $2,000,

16:19

but you just can't do anything with them.

16:21

(laughing)

16:23

But yeah, you found it.

16:24

You just buy, you keep buying those boxes

16:26

and then whatever was in those boxes is what's on sale

16:30

on the site that day.

16:30

I think it doesn't necessarily have to be one item.

16:33

It could be, we only have one of each item.

16:35

And as things get picked, it's gone.

16:37

- First come, first serve.

16:38

- I don't know, I have a PS5 in here today.

16:40

It's gone in 10 seconds somehow

16:41

'cause someone wrote a script to do that.

16:43

- Yeah, there is a problem.

16:47

Like you could just be sending broken things,

16:50

like just straight broken equipment to somebody

16:53

or claiming it for yourself.

16:55

So there's a balance.

16:56

- You could have a pretty easy--

16:57

- You know the risk.

16:58

- You could have a pretty easy--

16:59

- You check that box.

17:00

- No, you could pretty easily cover that.

17:01

I mean, like we were saying,

17:02

like it's 300 bucks for the box or something like that.

17:05

I think you can have 500

17:06

and it's probably $3,000 worth of items.

17:08

Like, okay, one quarter of them are broken.

17:12

You just go, sorry, okay.

17:14

Don't worry about it.

17:15

- We'll send you another.

17:16

Yeah, here, we'll pull it out of the other bin.

17:17

Yeah, that's true.

17:18

- No, just give them their money back

17:19

and you're like, sorry, no problem.

17:21

But you've already made your money

17:22

off all the other things that did work.

17:24

- That's right, that's right, yeah.

17:25

Add five more re-rolls to your next order.

17:27

- Sorry.

17:29

- Here's your money.

17:30

- We're gonna be considered gambling in no time.

17:32

Just watch.

17:33

- Well, but we're actually undoing the mystery box of it.

17:36

We're taking the gambling out of it.

17:38

(laughing)

17:39

- Yeah, it's--

17:40

- We're gambling that we'll be able to sell it.

17:42

(laughing)

17:43

But the internet's a big place.

17:44

- We have a local auction house here in West Michigan

17:46

that buys them in bulk and gets the pallets

17:49

and then breaks them up and does just an auction site.

17:51

I've gotten all kinds of great stuff from them.

17:53

It's great.

17:53

- So this is like drop ship though too, right, Scott?

17:56

Like you could buy like a million of Bose headphones

17:58

and all of a sudden and get them stupid cheap and--

18:02

- Mass drop even.

18:03

- Mass drop.

18:04

So mass drop subscribed.

18:06

- And then if you have over inventory at the end,

18:08

just sell all the wood or something.

18:10

- Ooh, or if you wanted to keep the element of surprise,

18:13

right, that you were like,

18:15

if you wanna leave it a little bit mysterious,

18:16

you just do a silhouette of the item on the shelf.

18:20

- Who's that Pokemon?

18:22

(laughing)

18:24

- People buy it based off what they think that probably is.

18:29

- Next to a banana for $75.

18:31

- That looks like a Leo shape.

18:32

I'm gonna send that to him.

18:34

- That pair of headphones could be a $2,000 Sennheiser set

18:37

or--

18:38

- Or it's like a doll turned sideways.

18:39

- Skull candy.

18:41

- Or a skull candy, right?

18:43

- Or a skull candy, yeah.

18:46

- Dude, this is cool, Scott.

18:47

I think it's just like the experience.

18:51

It's like lottery, a subscribed lottery model or something.

18:54

'Cause it is random items every month anyway, right?

18:57

- Right, yep.

18:59

- So that's just interesting.

19:01

I think there's a missed opportunity

19:03

to ship mass amounts of goods

19:06

'cause for one of our podcast guests,

19:08

it was cheaper or just as cost effective and convenient

19:12

to buy a microphone and send it through Amazon

19:14

than to ship one of our own personal microphones.

19:17

So there's like an element of--

19:19

- Really?

19:19

- Why ship it, just buy it?

19:23

Maybe there's a whole website

19:24

that you can create like that.

19:26

Just it's cheaper to buy it.com.

19:29

I don't know.

19:32

- Make a website that--

19:34

- Three ideas have come from this one.

19:36

- Make a website that tracks what you're trying to ship

19:39

and then immediately puts an ad that says,

19:40

"You could just buy this."

19:43

- Dude, honey.com.

19:44

- Four ideas.

19:45

- Yeah, honey for things you're trying to ship.

19:49

- Okay, I'm gonna add on to this a little bit more, Scott.

19:51

This is a fun idea because what if you take like,

19:55

you just send like, all right,

19:56

you mass drop 10 random pieces of art, let's say,

20:00

and you can send them to like 10 or five of your friends

20:03

and now you all share the same piece of crap

20:06

all of a sudden, right?

20:07

- All five of your friends' wives are mad at you

20:11

at the same time, it's great.

20:12

- Or it's just like, it's like,

20:14

oh, I did this subscription box

20:17

and I have to sign up three other friends.

20:20

And so now it's like, all right, we're all subscribed

20:22

and it's always, we all get shipped the same thing

20:25

every month so that we all talk about it.

20:27

So if it is a pair of socks, we all got the same pair

20:30

and now we can all, did you guys get your mystery box

20:33

from scottsocks.com?

20:36

- So you just have to sign up three of your friends

20:38

and then they have to sign up three friends

20:40

and you get a cut every time.

20:42

- Very triangle shape.

20:44

- No, no, they don't buy it.

20:46

You Scott got subscribed 40 bucks a month

20:49

and you have to add three friends to be a part of this.

20:52

- Right. - You're gifting it.

20:53

- Oh, I'm still the one who paid for everything.

20:55

Yeah, okay, I actually like that a lot

20:57

'cause when I do send, I gift one of these items

21:01

to one of my friends, it comes with our branding

21:03

and packaging on it so maybe they'll do it

21:05

for someone else then.

21:06

And it's like a pyramid scheme.

21:08

- It's sideways though.

21:09

- No, it's sideways pyramid.

21:12

So you start and then you send it to your friends

21:15

after three months, they're like, you know what?

21:17

I wanna do it with my parents and my siblings.

21:20

(laughing)

21:22

- Opt out, unsubscribe please.

21:25

- That's the beauty, you can't.

21:26

(laughing)

21:28

- I have to say like my relationship with stuff,

21:31

like having moved from Michigan to New York

21:33

however long ago that was, five, six, seven, eight years ago,

21:36

I don't know however long it was.

21:38

I'm still getting rid of things that I have had

21:41

from Michigan that I'm like, why is this taking up space

21:43

in my apartment?

21:44

Like it's small here guys, every square foot counts.

21:49

And the idea of sending people stuff they don't need,

21:52

it like deeply hurts me.

21:54

(laughing)

21:56

Just like that's more stuff that I just can't let go of

21:59

because I care about it but just takes up space in my life.

22:03

- That's the prank, that's the prank dude.

22:06

We all got the same beer bottle opener now,

22:08

you're stuck with it.

22:09

- Well that I'll take, you always need more beer bottles.

22:12

- See and then we can all shit on the same romper

22:14

that we're all sharing, right?

22:15

Like you send a romper to everybody

22:18

and now we're all like, all right.

22:20

- Did you get a romper?

22:21

- No again, that I'll keep, that I would keep.

22:23

- You see, you say it so bad.

22:27

- Romp him is a terrible name.

22:28

(upbeat music)

22:31

- Okay Russell, what do you got?

22:36

- So guys, here's the thing.

22:38

We have a incredible resource in every local community.

22:43

It's a, they're called like the community centers

22:48

where you go to figure out where,

22:50

like as certain as every city has this,

22:53

where they get visitors, they have the website,

22:55

they tell you about events about a city.

22:57

Visitors bureaus, okay.

23:00

I know, so these visitor bureaus know all the best spots

23:04

to go on dates, they know all the spots to hang out,

23:09

the best deals, the best happy hours,

23:11

'cause they have to, it's their job to know

23:12

and just communicate information to people.

23:15

So my idea, this is a Russell's Love Corner idea.

23:18

- Cue the music.

23:19

(laughing)

23:20

- Is you take,

23:21

you take these experts in a geographic region

23:28

and you get all these single people

23:30

and you work with these small businesses

23:33

to bring them all together.

23:34

And you say, hey, send me on a date.

23:36

You go to these visitor bureaus

23:39

and you catch up with people

23:41

and the visitors bureaus will match you

23:43

with either singles events or hell, even if you're a couple,

23:48

they can send you on a date to find like,

23:50

all right, this isn't busy on Tuesdays, really good spot.

23:53

It's kind of like finding hidden gems

23:56

within your local area.

23:59

They need money, they need a way to like,

24:03

I think connect with not just visitors,

24:06

but like the local residents too.

24:09

So yeah, this is, send me on a date.

24:14

- And businesses could pay you to pull in the people.

24:16

- Yes.

24:17

- When businesses come to you and they say,

24:19

yeah, can you put me on the books for next Tuesday?

24:21

You charge a fee and then suddenly

24:23

they have a couple hundred customers or whatever.

24:25

- I think it could be like,

24:26

you could almost have like a date planner,

24:28

like on the thing, where you go,

24:29

you're like, oh, I've meant to plan a date

24:32

with my wife or with my girlfriend,

24:35

or the person who I asked out on a date,

24:37

now I don't know where to take them.

24:39

You could like, yeah, you could go on the thing

24:40

and just be like, I need a date.

24:42

Like, what am I doing?

24:43

And it could like come up with like a schedule for the day.

24:46

- Burst into the bureau, I need a date.

24:48

- I'll be honest, I tried to make this a singles app idea

24:51

because I thought it'd be better, but you know what?

24:53

It is actually why I wrote it down,

24:55

is because every once in a while,

24:56

it's like my anniversary,

24:57

I've been to every fricking restaurant in this area

25:00

and just some like, mix it up, please, somebody, anybody.

25:04

And so I called the visitors bureau and they're like,

25:06

have you tried this place and this place and this place?

25:08

Sure enough, there's like three places I've never heard of

25:11

within 20 minutes of here.

25:12

I'm like, thank you so much.

25:14

Everybody should use you.

25:15

You were the matchmaker of better,

25:18

no, sorry, making my life better through visitors bureaus.

25:22

- I think the couples that already exist

25:24

still count as part of your love corner.

25:25

- You are, yeah.

25:26

- You're just a guru.

25:27

- Just a guru.

25:28

I'm just trying to streamline relationships.

25:31

- No, I think that's a good idea.

25:32

I mean, like here in Brooklyn,

25:34

we have a lot of like things in the city that are known

25:39

and exist, like for instance,

25:40

we have the botanical gardens

25:42

or actually Greenwood Cemetery,

25:44

as weird as it says to be a cemetery,

25:47

the cemetery is actually really cool.

25:49

And they have events, they have things like,

25:51

they have classes on like apiaries,

25:57

like handling apiaries and bees in the cemetery.

26:00

They have, they actually, this last summer I went to,

26:04

they had like fire jugglers and like circus performers.

26:08

- Circus performers?

26:09

- Yeah, yeah, no.

26:11

- What?

26:12

- Like, because it's like, you know, I don't know.

26:14

Some people are still buried there,

26:16

but it's like a historical cemetery.

26:17

I mean, it's like back civil war cemetery.

26:20

- I'm picturing fire jugglers

26:23

and then like a morning young kid over in the corner there.

26:26

- They still need to make money, you know,

26:28

but it's not like anyone's buying plots.

26:30

- Got it, got it, got it.

26:31

- Pre-buy.

26:32

- But it's huge and it's beautiful and it is great,

26:35

but like not just the cemetery, but all these things.

26:37

They have events, but I never know when they are.

26:40

I never know, like, and I can check their website,

26:41

I can check their whatever.

26:42

But if it was like, hey, no, this Saturday,

26:44

I planned to, you know, my wife and I wanted to go out

26:46

and do something, then it could be like,

26:47

hey, here's the events in Brooklyn that are going on

26:51

and make it, you know, make a plan

26:52

or make a day out of it.

26:54

- This is, yes.

26:56

- 'Cause like, it's really hard to host an event

26:57

and create events.

26:58

So it works on the other side and you're like,

27:00

oh, I'm gonna make this event,

27:01

but I don't know who's gonna show up.

27:02

Well, if you have this whole visitors bureau of people

27:05

with a list, it's like, I got a hundred people

27:07

looking for date ideas.

27:09

Just come up with a date night, segment,

27:12

or like buy one, get one pizza, flatbread,

27:15

and my wife and I will be there, you know?

27:17

So.

27:18

- Right.

27:19

- Totally.

27:19

- No, I like that.

27:20

- It works both ways, yeah.

27:22

Would you guys use this?

27:23

We're all married, we're all married men.

27:25

- Yeah, no, I totally, 1000%.

27:26

- I would.

27:27

- I totally.

27:28

- Absolutely use it.

27:29

- I'm thinking of all the, like,

27:30

there's a hundred that have tried this.

27:32

You know, you got your like Facebook local events

27:34

and you've got your whatever.

27:35

I'm trying to think where, why has it fallen short?

27:38

It's just the visitors bureau is brilliant.

27:39

I never think to go to them for anything ever.

27:42

- They actually have the information.

27:44

- And they don't need to make money.

27:45

- Yeah.

27:46

- That's really what it comes down to is there's no,

27:48

there's no business for them.

27:50

They can lose money doing this.

27:52

- Yeah.

27:53

- Well, what if you, would you pay money for this?

27:56

- No.

27:57

- Instant, instant date.

27:59

What if they saved you money?

28:00

- The money comes from the businesses.

28:02

I don't think you need to charge the people.

28:03

- Yeah, I'm not paying for it.

28:04

- Why not?

28:05

- Your local restaurants go to the visitors bureau

28:07

and they pay a little bit for the cannon of the,

28:09

the fire hose of people that the visitors bureau

28:11

send their way.

28:12

- You all know we're all going to password share.

28:14

(laughing)

28:15

- Like what?

28:15

- Subscribe.

28:17

- Okay, so then.

28:18

- Yeah, no.

28:19

- What if, what if you, when you subscribed,

28:21

you always got the couple's discount.

28:23

So you were always making money.

28:25

It was, it was, it was, as long as you use their service,

28:28

you were making 10 bucks a month.

28:29

And then every time you use their service,

28:32

you get a $10 coupon.

28:33

- Now you're having to make a new,

28:34

now they have to make a deal with the business.

28:36

They're not going to get some businesses

28:37

because they can't abide by the deal.

28:39

- Businesses.

28:40

- Then it's not, it doesn't encompass everything.

28:43

I want it to encompass everything.

28:44

- Well, it's.

28:45

- Russell, I almost like your variation of,

28:46

you're the one who physically called this tourism bureau.

28:50

You got the names and the cool ideas.

28:52

Can we utilize that part where this is a separate business

28:55

where we're using the bureau as a resource

28:58

in order to create our own catalog of cool things

29:00

in each city?

29:01

- So just, you're siphoning government money.

29:04

- Right. - I got it.

29:05

- Give me all the information you have

29:07

and I'm going to commercialize it.

29:09

(laughing)

29:11

It's public, I paid for your tax dollars.

29:14

(laughing)

29:16

- Just scraping their website.

29:19

(laughing)

29:21

- Well, I don't know, I kind of like that he talked

29:22

to a real person here who actually knows the town

29:25

inside and out and it's not just.

29:27

- Yeah, I like that too.

29:28

- SEO boosted article saying how Russ's

29:30

is the best restaurant in West Michigan or something.

29:33

- That's the thing, I can't trust like these blog posts

29:35

anymore, travel, like Yelp.

29:37

Everybody's figured out a way to like break the reviews.

29:40

- Yeah. - You know,

29:41

and you're like, what am I?

29:42

I can't look for anything.

29:43

I'm just going to find it myself

29:44

or like look at the menus online now all the time, so.

29:48

- That's your value prop.

29:50

This was told us by a real person who works for the city.

29:53

- That's right.

29:54

You have like people that spend their whole life

29:56

just every day.

29:58

- And that's how you know it's good.

29:59

- Thinking about the best places for Russell to go on a date.

30:02

- Yes, yes.

30:04

Listen, sometimes you just need like,

30:06

you know how many freaking dates you're responsible for?

30:09

We're all Ford's married dudes.

30:11

So you're responsible for the birthday date,

30:14

the anniversary date, the Valentine's day,

30:16

the every single one.

30:17

It's just like, can't we just outsource one of the 10

30:20

that we're responsible for?

30:22

(laughing)

30:24

- Can't I just outsource one of them?

30:25

- Carrie doesn't listen to this stuff, right?

30:26

She doesn't listen to this podcast.

30:28

- I think her, her dad, some other people.

30:31

(laughing)

30:32

- Listen, listen.

30:33

- It's like half our subscribers.

30:34

- Sir, anything I can do to automate my relationship

30:37

with my wife?

30:38

(laughing)

30:39

It's too much work.

30:40

- You know she's standing behind you right now, Russell.

30:43

- Oh no.

30:44

- There are other ways to show that you care

30:46

about your significant other.

30:48

Sometimes it's not making a decision on where to go to eat,

30:52

which is, or where to do.

30:54

Like sometimes you just need to like, what's a good,

30:57

I've done the make your own pasta thing.

31:00

I've done the make your own candle thing.

31:01

Like paint and pour.

31:03

Everybody that I know is in a long-term relationship

31:06

has a picture that you and your significant other

31:09

have painted together probably and it's hanging somewhere.

31:13

It's like we're running out of date ideas.

31:15

- See, Scott's going.

31:17

- As a date.

31:18

- See, we need more of those.

31:21

- What'd you have there, Scott?

31:22

- That's the painting that him and CJ painted, right?

31:26

Right behind you.

31:28

- I love that, the boat he's got behind him.

31:31

- The other one.

31:31

- My aunt actually painted that one.

31:33

- See, Leo, what you said is what every guy,

31:37

you know, when I bring this up would say to me,

31:39

they're like, oh, you're not romantic enough.

31:41

It's like, no, I've been romantic many times.

31:45

It's 10 years, 20 years now.

31:47

I need something new.

31:49

But I will go make a knife with my significant other

31:51

if it means that it's something different.

31:53

Do you know what I mean?

31:54

- Sure, absolutely.

31:56

- It's about having all the information.

31:58

It's not about automating it.

32:00

It's about having all the information.

32:02

Having something bring to you all the options

32:06

that you never would have thought of.

32:07

- But tailored to where you're currently living.

32:10

I love that.

32:11

- Well, hopefully you can get there within a day.

32:14

- Okay, Doyle, I think you hit something

32:16

that I'm really excited about now, like knife making.

32:19

But then like, what?

32:21

- Oh, they have, no, that wasn't a joke.

32:22

They have that here.

32:24

They have it like, yeah, yeah, it's expensive as hell,

32:26

but they have it.

32:28

And then you can be like, I love you so much

32:29

that I forged this knife with you

32:31

and you can kill me at any moment with it.

32:34

And that's just how much I trust you.

32:36

- That is weirdly and scary romantic.

32:37

- See, you could, like, there are a bunch of like,

32:40

let's say you're a wood shop, right?

32:42

And you literally manufacture wood products.

32:45

All of a sudden, the Visitor's Bureau is like,

32:47

hey, we have like 100 couples looking for dates

32:50

and calling every month.

32:51

Would you create a class once a month

32:54

for making a birdhouse?

32:57

And now all of a sudden, businesses are like, oh, shoot.

33:00

Maybe I--

33:00

- That's a good add-on, I like that.

33:02

- Add something crazy.

33:03

And it's more about the Visitor's Bureau

33:06

being like a network of, or a holder of all these couples

33:09

in the local community and redirecting them

33:12

to businesses 'cause, man, I don't know.

33:15

If you guys aren't romantic enough out there

33:17

and you've run out of ideas, it's 10 years.

33:19

That means you have to have how many, like, wait,

33:21

let me, what's the number?

33:22

Somebody do a number crunch here.

33:24

- Right, no, the--

33:24

- 10 dates a year.

33:26

You've been in a relationship for 10 years.

33:27

That means you have to figure out 100 things to do.

33:31

That's not that much, is it?

33:32

- Yeah.

33:33

(laughing)

33:34

(upbeat music)

33:36

- All right, Leo, what do you got?

33:41

- All right, I have a friend and colleague

33:43

who is the coolest person in the world.

33:45

Hello, Reagan, if you are listening.

33:47

She plays fantasy Great British Bake Off with 10 friends.

33:52

They buy in, they not only choose, like,

33:55

who's gonna be Star Baker

33:56

and who's gonna be going out this week,

33:58

but they also do, like, will Paul Hollywood

34:00

be in the intro this week,

34:02

and will Noel be wearing a shirt with an animal on it?

34:05

And they put in real money for it,

34:07

and they have a whole system with Google Forms

34:09

and spreadsheets to decide how people are winning.

34:12

I think this is the coolest thing in the world, right?

34:14

My pitch this week, yeah, this is not the pitch.

34:17

The pitch is, why is there no fantasy sports app

34:22

but for custom things?

34:24

Like, I'm gonna be the commissioner

34:26

of the Fantasy Survivor League.

34:29

- Oh, man.

34:30

- I'm gonna be the fantasy

34:31

Keeping Up With The Kardashians commissioner for this year.

34:34

Will there be a fight between X and Y or whatever?

34:38

So there is a custom fantasy sports app.

34:41

It doesn't seem great.

34:42

Somebody's sort of started this idea,

34:44

but it doesn't pull from anything.

34:45

You're on the hook for manual whatever.

34:47

If you go to the season of Great British Bake Off

34:50

on Wikipedia, there are detailed charts

34:53

with what each person made, who was Star Baker,

34:56

who got voted out.

34:56

It's all on the internet.

34:58

So we need to automate the idea

35:01

and build the league for people.

35:03

You can have suggestions.

35:04

You can even feed all this into GPT-4 and say,

35:07

hey, how would you structure a game

35:09

that's built off of this TV show, this movie.

35:13

- Here's all the information about it.

35:15

- Let's play fantasy.

35:16

What's gonna be in the movie theaters this fall

35:18

and what will do well?

35:19

Fantasy Oscars, right?

35:21

You can do all sorts of things where you structure the data

35:24

and you have points, you have bidding,

35:27

however you wanna build it,

35:29

where the app keeps track of it for you, right?

35:31

And then you can pull all this stuff from Wikipedia,

35:33

from Twitter, from whatever you wanna pull it from

35:36

and make it automated.

35:37

'Cause nobody is going into their fantasy sports app

35:39

and entering in what the score was

35:42

between the Buffalo Bills and the whoever this week, right?

35:45

The beauty of it is that it takes care

35:46

of all that stuff for you.

35:47

And that doesn't exist yet.

35:49

And I want it to, both for my friend, Reagan,

35:51

and for the world.

35:52

- Okay, two things.

35:53

One, that is a fantastic idea.

35:55

I love this.

35:57

Two, "Breaking Bad" season six,

36:00

we were living in college and a bunch of guys at the time

36:03

when that came out, and we had a whiteboard in our kitchen,

36:05

a huge whiteboard with everyone's bet

36:07

about what was gonna happen for the next episode each week.

36:11

Is Hank gonna die this week?

36:12

Or is this guy gonna get captured?

36:14

And blah, blah, blah.

36:15

And we took that very seriously.

36:17

And I love this.

36:19

- I love this idea too.

36:20

I mean, I've never wanted to be in a fantasy league

36:23

of any sort until you just said the words,

36:25

Great British fantasy league.

36:27

- It's so cool.

36:28

- And yes, number one, yes, I want that.

36:33

And B, no, I mean, I think it needs a platform.

36:36

I mean, it's a huge growing industry,

36:39

so much so that John Oliver did a thing

36:41

saying it needs to stop.

36:42

- Oh, wow.

36:43

- And of course-- - That's how you know

36:44

it's good.

36:45

- No, not really.

36:45

Just like the FanDuel and DraftKings

36:48

and all that is getting insane.

36:50

But anyways, all that aside.

36:53

No, like, yeah, it should be pretty simple

36:56

in the sense of you should be able to decide

36:59

what data is being tracked or being,

37:04

and then, I mean, I think you'd still have to put the data

37:06

in a bit, right?

37:07

Like, it doesn't know if the Kardashians

37:10

got in a fight that episode.

37:11

Like, that's, you know what I mean?

37:13

Unless you're having AI try to determine

37:15

from like the transcript of the closed captions

37:17

of the show, maybe.

37:18

- Under over on how many times they curse

37:21

or whatever it is, yeah.

37:23

- But if you can just put the data in once,

37:24

if you can just be watching the episode

37:26

and be like, it has a list of things

37:28

that people are betting on

37:28

and then your commissioner or whatever is like,

37:30

yep, that happened.

37:31

Yep, this whatever.

37:32

But then it gives you all the stats,

37:34

all the breakdowns, all the tables,

37:35

all the whatever after,

37:37

which is just data entry once, I think is due.

37:39

- You could have voting.

37:41

Yeah, you could have like everyone have to reach a consensus

37:44

on whether or not that counted as a thing, you know?

37:46

Have it all be voted in there.

37:48

Yeah.

37:48

- Guys, this is how FanDuel and DraftKings

37:51

breaks into a whole market segment

37:54

of women that haven't thought about gambling,

37:57

but know that that person's gonna get the rose

38:00

on The Bachelor,

38:01

that knows that they're gonna like,

38:04

the reality TV show segment is insane.

38:08

And so you just are like,

38:09

hey, how much do you actually know that?

38:11

And then you have guys sitting on their FanDuel app

38:13

all of a sudden that's like,

38:15

hey, I got 50 bucks on a Bachelor gambling, you know?

38:20

Maybe I'll just ask my--

38:22

- Bachelor gambling.

38:23

- Yeah, all right.

38:23

You guys watch The Bachelor,

38:24

like all of a sudden, you know,

38:25

you start asking your friends about The Bachelor

38:27

and they will tell you everything about it.

38:30

Who's up next, who do you think is gonna get gone?

38:33

And now you're like,

38:33

I just, I think I'm just gonna bet 50 bucks.

38:37

- Who's gonna be the next Bachelorette?

38:38

- There are Vegas odds for everything.

38:41

And if you could get into some of those APIs for,

38:43

you know, who's gonna be the next speaker of the house

38:46

or whatever, people are bidding on all this stuff.

38:49

Only you're just making it for like your friends.

38:50

- Vegas will just give that away.

38:52

- I remember seeing the Vegas odds

38:53

of who's gonna get the Iron Throne

38:55

in like season six of Game of Thrones

38:57

and they had all of their bets up.

38:58

- Dude, we did this in college with,

39:00

what was the one, two armies fighting

39:04

against Deadliest Warrior?

39:05

- That's it.

39:05

- On Spike TV.

39:07

- World's Deadliest?

39:08

- He gave us the show World's Deadliest Warrior

39:10

where they just have two random people in history,

39:13

like I'm gonna take a pirate and fight a knight

39:15

or something, who's gonna win?

39:16

Or a Spetsnaz soldier against a World War II Marine

39:19

or something.

39:20

But they would give you the list of who's fighting who

39:23

at the beginning of each season.

39:25

And we had huge betting pools of,

39:26

I think this person's gonna win this one

39:28

and this one's gonna win this one.

39:29

Yeah, Russell, that's an excellent example.

39:32

- What if this app, okay, say you're

39:34

in a Great British Bake Off pool, right?

39:37

And there's probably 10, 100, 1,000

39:41

other Great British Bake Off pools, right?

39:43

Now people are placing their bets in their own pool

39:46

but our app looks across pools to aggregate the odds.

39:51

- Figures out what the most popular types of bets are

39:54

and what not.

39:56

Right, what people think is gonna happen.

39:59

And then adjust the odds for everybody's pools

40:02

based off of all the pools and what people are betting on.

40:06

- The tech podcast Hard Fork a couple months ago

40:09

talked about this.

40:10

They had one of the two guys went and did a,

40:14

I think this was a New York Times thing.

40:16

So there's a whole world around forecasting nerds,

40:21

the manifold markets.

40:23

And it's, yeah, it's this exact thing.

40:25

They take, will the CEO of Twitter still be Linda Riccarino

40:29

in six months from now, yes or no?

40:31

And there people are all betting real money on it.

40:33

Manifold.markets, that's the one.

40:35

But the idea is like, can you use the wisdom of the crowds

40:39

to guess how will the Israel-Hamas war end or whatever?

40:43

- Oh, that's crazy.

40:46

- House speaker, SBF trial, will he be guilty?

40:49

Or will we get a government shutdown?

40:51

That's a current thing that's being threatened right now

40:53

or whatever.

40:54

It's crazy.

40:55

And you can actually do real data science off of this.

40:58

People always say like, I bet you $10

41:00

that X is gonna happen next week.

41:01

Oh yeah, well, let's put your money where your mouth is.

41:04

Let's do it.

41:05

That's the idea of manifold markets now.

41:06

- I mean, he was right.

41:07

Twitter did become X.

41:08

(laughing)

41:10

- Boo.

41:11

Yes, it did.

41:14

Cultural vandalism.

41:16

I wanna be on the record about that.

41:17

But yeah, turning that but a game amongst friends,

41:21

I think is the key that nobody's done yet.

41:22

- I think keeping it amongst friends

41:24

also honestly puts you legally more in the safe zone

41:29

in the sense that once you get into like serious betting

41:32

outside of like a small group of friends,

41:34

that's where you kind of, where things get more regulated.

41:37

And that's where like the problems with FanDuel

41:39

and DraftKings is kind of coming from.

41:41

But like if you can keep it, there's less money.

41:45

To be honest, there's less money being made

41:47

if you keep it with people, with friends.

41:49

But I think legally,

41:51

and some would argue orally,

41:53

probably better to keep it like office pools.

41:57

- Fantasy is so fun

42:00

that I don't really care about the NFL too much

42:01

and I still enjoy fantasy football.

42:03

It's the decision-making coaching side of things.

42:07

And there's a lot of things

42:08

that I care a lot more about than football

42:11

that I would love to fantasize.

42:13

- Fantasize?

42:15

- I don't wanna fantasize them.

42:18

I don't think that's what that means.

42:19

(upbeat music)

42:21

- All right, Doyle, what do you got for us this week?

42:25

- All right, I have a couple ideas,

42:27

but I have one that I decided to share for this

42:30

because I feel like time is of the essence

42:33

before somebody does it.

42:35

And I just wanna say-

42:36

- I just wanna say I thought of it first.

42:38

- Yes. - I saw you.

42:39

- Yes. - I knew it.

42:41

- Write it in an envelope, mail it to yourself.

42:43

- Right, yeah, exactly.

42:45

But anyways, so I'm sure you guys are all familiar

42:48

with the low-code, no-code movement of apps.

42:52

- Oh, sure.

42:53

- Of creating apps in the sense that

42:54

there's not enough trained programmers and coders

42:59

or whatever to make all the new apps

43:01

with all the new updates for everything,

43:03

always, all at once.

43:04

So they've come up with a lot of things.

43:07

They've come up with node-based making of apps

43:10

and dragging and dropping elements

43:12

to have it write its own CSS, HTML, whatever.

43:15

I was thinking you take a UI like Unreal Engine.

43:18

Are you guys familiar with how Unreal Engine

43:20

does its programming?

43:22

For anybody who's not, the idea for Unreal Engine is

43:24

it has all the things out of the box

43:26

that you might need to put onto a screen, right?

43:28

But when you get down to how two objects

43:31

or two things should interact,

43:33

you can pull pre-written code

43:35

that's just shown to you in a little box

43:37

and on the left has inputs and on the right has output.

43:40

And when it comes down to programming,

43:41

everything is just sort of inputs and output, right?

43:45

So you take your user input node

43:47

and you hook it up into a little black box

43:49

and then that little black box does something

43:52

and outputs it.

43:53

Now the programmer's job is to know

43:54

what's in that little black box.

43:55

But now we have AI programmers.

43:58

So I can just tell the AI,

44:01

I want these inputs to have these outputs every time.

44:06

And maybe I hook it up to a database

44:08

and then it will write the code again and again and again

44:11

until it passes all your tests.

44:14

And then now you have a little box

44:16

that does one specific thing

44:17

and you do that one by one by one

44:19

for like node-based graph

44:21

of how you want your data flow for your app to go.

44:23

- Like a flow chart, you mean?

44:24

Node-based, you mean flow charting, yeah.

44:26

- Yeah, like a flow chart sort of, you know?

44:28

Kind of in the same way that Unity does,

44:31

you can grab little code blocks that you move around

44:34

and you have them all interact with each other.

44:35

But now I don't have to know how to write any of it.

44:38

I just am describing to the AI

44:41

what I want each box to do.

44:42

Small, contained, solvable problems,

44:45

but I'm giving it the larger algorithmic architecture

44:50

of the app.

44:51

- I'd use this, yeah, absolutely.

44:52

- And then if you want, you can go under the hood,

44:54

look at the code, fix something if it's simple

44:56

or if you know, or if you do have knowledge,

44:58

you can tell it to write the whole thing

45:01

in a language you know

45:01

so that you have the better ability to debug it.

45:04

But all it knows is inputs and outputs.

45:08

- You know what's funny, Doyle?

45:09

Like in coding, there's this thing

45:11

called test-driven development.

45:12

- Yeah.

45:13

- Where you write these tests

45:14

and all the coders are supposed to do is pass the tests.

45:19

And so in a way, you've just said,

45:21

the people that write tests, which are like,

45:23

I don't think typically the senior level coders

45:27

can become the developers themselves

45:30

because they just write really good tests.

45:32

And so the stronger their tests that they build,

45:35

you're just like, AI, solve for these tests.

45:38

And all of a sudden you have a working app, more or less,

45:41

right, maybe without any UI, but you just have, boom,

45:45

now it works.

45:47

And all of a sudden you just have the AI future, man.

45:50

It's gonna be crazy.

45:51

- Yeah, you know, people are talking about how AI

45:53

is gonna be writing all these programs themselves.

45:56

It's gonna be whatever.

45:57

And I just kind of was thinking to myself,

45:59

well, what would it really look like?

46:01

What does it really look like when we have AI

46:03

able to program accurately, correctly most of the time,

46:08

which it's pretty close now, but all that to say,

46:10

like, what did those jobs look like?

46:11

Those jobs look like people writing tests

46:13

and creating the overall architecture of an app,

46:16

but not necessarily writing each,

46:19

every implementation of every little thing.

46:21

- I feel like I have just enough coding strength

46:23

to make small, really niche services for myself

46:27

and not quite enough to like build a few apps

46:30

that I would like to be able to build.

46:31

And if I were to break it down with a tool

46:34

like what you're describing,

46:35

I think that would put it just within arm's reach.

46:37

I would love something like this.

46:39

- Right, right.

46:40

- I wonder if you could apply this to like other things too.

46:42

Like, I guess when you're thinking about AI,

46:44

it's like, oh, I want to 3D print a thing

46:48

and you just keep running a 3D print until it gets it right.

46:53

I want to be able to capture a bug faster

46:57

and you just let the AI randomly,

47:00

well, I guess you don't need a 3D printer to do that.

47:03

You could just have it generate that.

47:05

But I guess, you know, it's-

47:08

- Well, it generates 10,000 iterations

47:09

and the test that you've defined is efficiency

47:13

for catching bug or whatever, yeah.

47:15

- So I actually tried to write

47:19

one of our early ideas in the show.

47:21

I just, I'm like, you know, screw it.

47:23

I'm just gonna try it.

47:24

I'm just gonna see if I could actually create this or not.

47:27

And I don't know how to code.

47:28

And so I went to chat GPT and I said,

47:31

I described the app that I wanted

47:33

and I said, make this for me.

47:34

And it wrote a Python script

47:36

and then I ran the Python script and it was buggy

47:38

and it did blah, blah, blah, and it didn't run.

47:40

And so I didn't, like,

47:41

I have no idea how to troubleshoot or fix this.

47:43

So I just copied all the errors at the bottom,

47:46

put them back in the chat GPT and said, fix it.

47:48

So I tried it again.

47:49

And then after like three or four iterations of that,

47:52

I had a fully working app and I just,

47:54

or at least a section of the app

47:56

that I wanted to do one of the features.

47:58

So then I did that again with another one of the features

48:00

that I wanted to do.

48:01

I need this to light up this color, blah, make it happen.

48:04

Three or four iterations, boom.

48:05

And by the end of it, I had like six different code sets

48:08

and then I copied all of them in the chat GPT.

48:11

And I said, put all these together in one.

48:13

And three or four iterations later,

48:15

I had a beautiful state machine and working code.

48:19

- Well, I mean, that's the idea of programming, right?

48:21

Is you should be able to write a function that works

48:23

when you give it the inputs and it gives the same outputs.

48:26

And then you just do that a hundred times.

48:28

So you have a hundred functions

48:29

and then you have one thing that determines

48:31

what order you do those functions in.

48:33

And I mean, it's nested dolls all the way up,

48:37

but yeah, I mean, that's really all it is.

48:41

There's actually, that was reminding me,

48:42

there was somebody who did make a thing

48:44

similar to what your method,

48:46

but he made like a package called Wolverine,

48:49

which all it does is it looks over your shoulder,

48:52

basically at your screen at what you're typing.

48:54

And then when it runs an error, it's like,

48:56

hey, I know what that error was.

48:57

Do you want me to fix it?

48:58

Or do you want to fix it yourself?

48:59

And then you go, you fix it.

49:01

And then it fixes it.

49:02

And then it makes a mistake, right?

49:04

It declares a variable that would be needed,

49:07

but never declares it rather.

49:09

It mentions a variable that would be needed,

49:11

but it's never declared.

49:12

And then a new error pops up and it goes,

49:15

oh, whoops, that was me.

49:16

And it fixes that.

49:17

And it will just do it over and over again

49:18

until it runs into no errors.

49:19

And it's like, all right, you take it from here.

49:21

And then you just keep typing along

49:22

until you hit another error.

49:24

And it's like, oh, I can fix that.

49:25

- Wow.

49:26

- And it called it Wolverine 'cause it's self healing.

49:28

It just continually goes over and over and over again

49:30

until it works.

49:32

- Okay, I'm gonna throw a curve ball here for a second,

49:35

but I'm wondering, can you like,

49:37

so hypothetically it's inputs and outputs, right?

49:40

You were saying, let's say you created a connection

49:42

to the Unity engine and like the goal was,

49:45

I want to be a better dancer, okay?

49:47

So you put your, you go on an Xbox connect

49:50

and you do your dance moves.

49:52

And then the inputs and outputs, right?

49:54

Is you input your dance moves

49:56

and the output is better dance moves.

49:59

Or like it tells you what's wrong.

50:01

Like use Unity to like do capture information.

50:05

And then output is, what if I set the output

50:08

to make this model dance better, right?

50:11

The 3D model.

50:12

Could you do stuff like that?

50:13

Like that's something that could be done, right?

50:15

- And if you can get that going in real time

50:17

in a VR headset where it's tracking

50:18

where your arms and legs are in, Russell,

50:21

you got like, you know how you have the piano learning things

50:24

where it's kind of like Guitar Hero,

50:25

they're falling and you're pressing them in order.

50:27

You got that, but it's a wireframe

50:29

of where your body needs to be next.

50:31

And you're, how do I move from here to here

50:33

to get my dance moves?

50:36

- Yeah, if so, anyone's going to have the real time,

50:39

it's going to be a Pixar will in a few,

50:41

in like a few years.

50:43

Like, I'm not sure if you guys know this

50:44

but they post all their white papers

50:46

about how they do their 3D stuff on their website.

50:49

Like you can go to Pixar and read their like

50:51

full research white paper on how Sully

50:54

has a million trillion hairs on his body

50:57

and how they render that all in real time.

51:00

We got super in the nerd weeds this week.

51:01

I love it.

51:02

This was a lot of fun.

51:03

- Yeah.

51:04

- Wow.

51:05

- Yeah.

51:06

(laughing)

51:07

- It was good.

51:07

- Thank you all for listening.

51:08

We hope you enjoyed yourself this week

51:09

and thank you Doyle for coming here.

51:10

This was a lot of fun.

51:11

- Hey, I had a lot of fun.

51:12

Yeah, thank you guys for having me.

51:14

- You said you have several ideas.

51:15

So we got to have you back here

51:17

so we can get that next one out of you, all right?

51:18

- That's why I didn't talk about any other ones.

51:20

- Oh yeah.

51:21

- So I self invited back on.

51:23

- Already looking forward to it.

51:24

Our website is Spitball.show.

51:26

Please, if you wouldn't mind to email us some feedback,

51:29

your thoughts, your comments, your ideas.

51:30

We want to hear more about the pitches you heard

51:32

and what your thoughts are on them.

51:33

And if you have some of your own,

51:35

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51:37

no-code solution.

51:40

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51:41

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51:42

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52:02

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52:04

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52:06

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52:08

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52:09

(upbeat music)