Ikea for Boats, Dotluck, Movie Credits Database, and Self-Driving Street Sweepers
Ep. 40

Ikea for Boats, Dotluck, Movie Credits Database, and Self-Driving Street Sweepers

Episode description

Special thanks to David for joining us on this episode!

00:00:00 - Intro
00:01:33 - Alegorithms
00:05:28 - Ikea for Boats
00:15:53 - Dotluck
00:26:00 - Movie Credits Database
00:34:55 - Self-Driving Street Sweepers
00:51:52 - Outro

Download transcript (.srt)
0:04

I'm Scott.

0:05

I'm Russell.

0:06

And I'm Leo.

0:07

This is Spitball.

0:17

Welcome to Spitball, where three groundbreaking geeks and a guest empty our heads of startup

0:21

and tech product ideas that we have stuck up in there so you can all have them for free.

0:25

Anything that we say is yours to keep.

0:27

Scott, I believe you brought our guest this week.

0:29

Who'd

0:30

you bring?

0:30

- I did, guys.

0:31

I'm very excited to finally bring on the show,

0:34

the David Webster.

0:36

David, not only a long time friend,

0:38

but also professional percussionist.

0:41

He's the drummer behind the weirdo death doom metal madness

0:45

that is Slugchild.

0:46

You know, if the name Slugchild's familiar,

0:48

it's because the new hit single "Love Leech" I believe,

0:51

just hit the

0:51

Billboard Top 100 on

0:52

Spotify this week.

0:53

We have been

0:54

trying

0:54

to book him

0:55

ever since this show started.

0:56

We're very excited to have David Webster.

0:59

- Now you have a

0:59

hard

0:59

stop in 50 minutes

1:01

for

1:01

going to Rolling Stone, right?

1:02

- 15

1:02

actually, yeah, sorry.

1:04

(laughing)

1:06

I'm so busy, you know, with all of my--

1:08

- Thank you for being here, David.

1:10

- Yeah, no worries.

1:11

- This is gonna be a good time.

1:12

- My Spotify millions has turned me

1:15

into a really selfish, rancid person, yeah.

1:19

(laughing)

1:21

- We've all gotta have a hobby, and mine's being rancid.

1:24

Yeah,

1:25

my hobby is getting paid for playing music.

1:28

That's my main hobby.

1:31

Making royalties.

1:33

Well, in addition to being an excellent musician, sir,

1:35

I always tell my friends that I can always tell

1:37

when David's been at a party that I've hosted

1:39

because when I go to do my returns,

1:41

there's these weird ass

1:42

beer cans

1:44

that can't be accepted anywhere

1:46

because you are an enthusiast of

1:48

adult

1:49

beverages.

1:49

So to get us warmed up today,

1:51

I wrote a little game for us

1:52

that I'm gonna call Algorithms.

1:54

Great.

1:54

In this one, I'm just gonna list a word.

1:57

You're gonna tell me, is it a Midwestern beer

2:00

made by someone in one of our neighboring states here,

2:03

or is it a programming language?

2:05

(laughing)

2:05

I love this.

2:07

This is great.

2:07

And we gotta start always as we do with David, our guest.

2:10

David. Okay.

2:11

Crystal, programming language or beer?

2:13

Or drug.

2:14

Or Pepsi.

2:15

Oh, I mean, it's certainly Pepsi.

2:18

It's a Pepsi.

2:19

I'm gonna say,

2:21

I'm going to say obscure programming language.

2:24

It's an obscure programming language.

2:26

A Ruby-inspired

2:27

language with a focus on speed and type

2:29

safety.

2:29

Very good.

2:30

That tracks.

2:30

That tracks.

2:31

Scott, Cascadian.

2:33

I'm going to go beer on that one.

2:35

I

2:35

just can't--

2:35

It's a beer.

2:36

It's a style of beer.

2:37

David is already nodding.

2:38

David's going to--

2:39

No, I don't know it.

2:40

I'm just agreeing with you.

2:42

Very good.

2:43

Found in various Midwestern breweries.

2:45

Russell, Cobra.

2:47

Oh, man.

2:48

That's both.

2:49

Is that a trick question?

2:50

That is both.

2:51

- Triple checked,

2:52

maybe there is somewhere,

2:53

but in the Midwest is where I tried to limit it down to.

2:57

- I'm gonna say then, oh man.

3:01

- Cobra.

3:01

- I'm gonna say coding language.

3:03

- It

3:03

is, very good.

3:05

Object oriented for.NET.

3:06

That's three for three, right?

3:07

Well done, okay, this should get

3:08

harder.

3:09

- Let's go beat the game.

3:11

(laughing)

3:11

Ooh, let's go.

3:12

- Dastard.

3:13

(laughing)

3:13

- Getting cocky

3:14

in round one.

3:15

David, Bodhi, B-O-D-H-I.

3:19

I'm gonna say that's programming language.

3:21

- Columbus Brewing Company in Ohio.

3:23

Condolences.

3:24

- Dermot!

3:26

(laughing)

3:28

- I'm out! - Storm off.

3:29

- Yeah, I'm outta here.

3:30

He's gotta write a song.

3:34

- Scott,

3:34

mosaic.

3:35

- Ooh, everything in me is screaming beer,

3:37

but I have to do the opposite of what I say,

3:39

so I'm gonna say programming language.

3:40

- It is very good.

3:42

- Nice. - Strategy, guys.

3:43

- Damn, Scott, you figured this out.

3:44

- 'Cause it would be mosaic, hopped, IPA.

3:47

- 37 episodes.

3:48

(laughing)

3:50

- Russell, Matilda.

3:52

- Oh man, that's a beer.

3:54

That's gotta be a beer.

3:55

- Goose Island, Illinois, very

3:56

good.

3:56

- Okay,

3:57

that's right.

3:57

- Way to go guys.

3:59

- David,

4:00

Dart.

4:01

- I'm gonna say beer.

4:02

- It's a programming language from Google.

4:04

- Fuck.

4:04

- It's a UI development one, yeah.

4:07

- Scott, Pike, P-I-K-E.

4:09

- Going beer.

4:10

- It's another programming language.

4:11

- Ah, okay, see?

4:13

- Is it a four letter word?

4:14

- Programming language.

4:16

Well, these are all Russell Vala, V-A-L-A.

4:19

V-A-L-A.

4:20

This is the four letter round.

4:21

Yeah.

4:24

That's a programming language.

4:25

It is, developed by Gnome.

4:27

Yes, very good.

4:28

Last time through, David Enigma.

4:30

Beer.

4:31

Yeah, New Glarus in Wisconsin.

4:33

You've probably had all of these.

4:34

I don't know.

4:35

Scott

4:35

Groovy.

4:37

That's got to be a beer.

4:38

It's a

4:38

programming language.

4:39

Runs on JVM, yeah.

4:41

Very good.

4:42

What?

4:42

Yeah, condolences.

4:43

And then Russell, furious.

4:46

Oh,

4:46

that's a beer.

4:47

Yeah, surly brewing in Minnesota.

4:49

David-- oh, oh, come on.

4:51

Oh, I called David--

4:52

It's good.

4:53

It's good.

4:54

So if you got it, does that mean that Russell, you got all four?

4:57

Did you?

4:57

I think

4:57

so.

4:58

I think he did.

4:58

Did I get all four?

4:59

Damn.

5:00

You might

5:00

have.

5:00

Although I never keep track during these.

5:02

Don't worry about it.

5:04

Well done.

5:05

Russell, does that mean you go first

5:06

or you pick who goes first?

5:07

We've never really figured out what

5:08

the prize is.

5:09

Yeah, he gets to decide.

5:10

And Leo, I'm always impressed.

5:11

Not only do you come each week with an idea to pitch,

5:14

but you gotta come up with a game as well.

5:16

Yeah.

5:16

Well done, Randy.

5:17

The door's

5:18

always open if one of you guys

5:19

wants to.

5:20

(laughing)

5:20

One

5:21

of you guys wants to

5:21

do something.

5:23

Yeah,

5:23

come on, to collaborate, co-collaborate.

5:26

(laughing)

5:28

I'll go first.

5:29

Do it. That's fine.

5:29

Hit us, go ahead Russell.

5:31

All right guys, so as you know,

5:33

I do my yearly patronage out to Florida

5:37

for a couple weeks.

5:38

Ah yes, welcome back.

5:39

Yes.

5:41

Patronage.

5:41

Is that what it is?

5:43

In your retirement,

5:44

yeah.

5:44

What's the word?

5:46

Your--

5:47

Your snowbird.

5:48

Pilgrimage.

5:49

That's the word, pilgrimage.

5:51

That's what

5:51

I--

5:51

Yeah.

5:53

I yearly pilgrimage out to

5:54

Florida.

5:54

To the holy land of Tampa, Florida, or wherever.

5:57

That's right, yes.

5:59

I'm

5:59

more of a Gulf of America guy.

6:04

Insane,

6:04

right?

6:05

Got

6:05

to see that for the first time.

6:08

- I'm used to seeing the Mexico version.

6:11

And now that I got, when I was there,

6:15

I brought this up in the past,

6:18

but they have these awesome sailboats

6:20

called Hobie Cats, they're catamarans.

6:23

And these boats are basically two car boys

6:27

and a trampoline between them

6:29

with a sail,

6:30

all right?

6:31

- There you go.

6:32

- And,

6:33

or like, you know, two inflatable tubes.

6:35

And I'm like, basically I want to disrupt

6:39

the pontoon industry through these Hobie Cat pontoon boats.

6:44

They fold

6:45

up, they collapse on each other, right?

6:49

So like

6:49

the whole thing is basically, yeah,

6:52

two tubes, two metal pipes, and a piece of fabric

6:56

that keeps everybody together.

6:57

You

6:58

throw a motor on that thing, and you're off, right?

7:02

The pontoon boats of today are like 30 grand, like new.

7:08

And it just blows my mind.

7:11

- Right, they have all that disgusting electricity

7:14

and like, you know.

7:16

- Cushions.

7:17

- And

7:17

sensors.

7:18

- Seats, yeah, a steering mechanism.

7:20

- Yeah, right.

7:22

- Hate that shit, it sucks.

7:24

- Sorry, you weren't

7:25

done.

7:25

- Ruins the boating vibe.

7:27

- You, okay,

7:29

outside of the

7:29

electricity, okay,

7:30

you

7:30

put that in a plastic

7:31

bag, all right?

7:32

Everybody's got those, all right?

7:35

(laughing)

7:39

These sailboats are like, what,

7:41

I think they're five grand maybe?

7:42

- Sure.

7:43

- 10, 15, it depends on how you're looking at it.

7:46

But I just don't see why you can't create

7:49

a collapsible, cheaper pontoon boat

7:52

using, you know, like the smart car of

7:55

pontoon boats,

7:56

but not

7:56

as lame.

7:58

So,

7:59

and then you have, right, a rudder, you know,

8:02

- Just the millennial version of a pontoon boat,

8:05

because listen,

8:06

only the boomers can afford the real ones.

8:08

- That's factual.

8:11

- I'm

8:11

out here like dreaming and drooling

8:14

over a collapsible boat and not a dinghy.

8:18

Those things are just

8:19

nobody deserves.

8:19

- A collapsible party boat.

8:21

- Yes.

8:22

- Hell yeah.

8:23

- And then it can collapse when you're having a party on it.

8:26

That's like.

8:28

- No, you have some industrial

8:30

metal

8:30

pontoons.

8:31

You know what I mean?

8:32

Can you

8:33

elaborate

8:33

what

8:33

you mean by collapse?

8:35

I'm having trouble picturing this.

8:35

I want to fit this in the back of my car.

8:37

Like the two just come together.

8:39

OK.

8:39

Yes.

8:39

So you want

8:40

it to somehow lock into place,

8:42

and then unlock, and then fold up or something?

8:44

I'm saving on shipping costs, right?

8:47

And so-- hey, get it?

8:49

Boat,

8:49

shipping.

8:50

Yeah, Ikea boat,

8:50

shipping.

8:51

Yeah, a

8:51

little bit of an Ikea boat assembly kind of thing.

8:54

But it also adds to the portability.

8:56

You can throw it on the roof of your car.

9:00

Car.

9:00

or you know what I mean?

9:01

Like

9:01

something like

9:02

two, you can put two kayaks on a car.

9:05

Why can't you make a pontoon boat

9:07

that works kind of like that?

9:09

- Boom. - Interesting.

9:10

- Okay.

9:11

- Russell, I think you could seriously do this

9:13

with some tent poles.

9:14

Okay, like something stronger than tent poles,

9:16

but that idea that you build them on itself

9:17

and like two inflatable kayaks.

9:19

Fully, like that

9:21

whole thing could fit

9:22

into a duffel bag at that point.

9:24

And then you just need an air compressor,

9:26

a car battery and a trolling motor.

9:28

- Yes, thank you Scott.

9:30

- I'd buy water

9:30

for $300, man.

9:32

- Yes, and it's like a bed.

9:34

And dude, what if you turn that into a camping tent?

9:37

Somebody said this.

9:38

The tent pole is like, why

9:40

not

9:40

sleep on the water?

9:43

- That's fun.

9:44

- Because you can't sleep in a kayak, really, I don't

9:46

think.

9:47

- But it's like a hammock

9:48

in between the two kayaks.

9:50

That's nice.

9:50

- Throw a little anchor on the end.

9:52

That sounds

9:52

amazing.

9:53

- It does

9:53

sound amazing.

9:54

- Poles are rigid.

9:55

They keep the two sides apart.

9:56

Oh, yeah, this could

9:57

work.

9:57

- You know what's funny, too?

9:58

I think you can just park your

10:00

boat in the middle of the lake

10:02

and no fees, right?

10:04

You can moor it out there.

10:06

You'd have to add an anchor to your whole contraption,

10:08

but we could do it.

10:08

Yeah.

10:09

I mean, that's free living.

10:12

Like, no property taxes.

10:14

Buy a PO box, and you're gone.

10:16

You just buy

10:17

an actual tent and put it on top in the water.

10:19

Right.

10:19

Right.

10:20

Do people-- like, houseboats, I guess they don't moor it,

10:23

right?

10:24

They don't do what I--

10:25

do crazy shit like

10:26

that.

10:26

You could.

10:27

Yeah.

10:27

You just

10:28

got to have supplies, right?

10:30

Houseboats have that electricity, though.

10:32

They got to

10:32

plug in.

10:32

Yeah, they have that

10:33

filthy refrigeration

10:36

technology.

10:36

It sucks.

10:37

Have they solved for that yet, electricity?

10:41

They're working on it.

10:42

Batteries, I guess.

10:43

Solar cells.

10:45

Yeah.

10:45

I mean, if you had an OK solar array that wasn't like 10,000

10:52

pounds, you know?

10:53

There's some cheap thin

10:54

ones out there

10:54

you can get on

10:55

AliExpress now.

10:56

It's gotten a lot better.

10:58

This might be my privilege talking,

11:00

but I can think of at least two people in my life

11:02

who've bought a kayak or a canoe

11:05

and don't really use it anymore.

11:06

It sits in a garage or something.

11:08

So

11:08

yeah, okay, you're one of them, David.

11:09

Okay. Inflatable, but yes.

11:11

Sure.

11:12

What about if your business, Russell,

11:14

sold the conversion kit,

11:16

where you have the, like,

11:18

you attach the rods and stuff

11:20

onto what you already have gathering dust

11:22

up in that attic in a garage

11:23

that you haven't gotten out in two or three seasons.

11:26

do something new with that thing

11:27

that you don't know what to do with.

11:28

- I like that.

11:29

- I want

11:30

on Craig's list for 50 bucks

11:31

and lash it to your other one that you've got.

11:34

Reduce, reuse, recycle.

11:36

- I like that.

11:37

- This is why we spit ballio,

11:38

yes.

11:41

- Then you're on the hook for like,

11:43

I don't know, when it goes catastrophically wrong

11:45

when they have two different kayaks

11:47

or they're puncturing holes in their

11:48

inflatable

11:49

thing

11:49

then trying to go out on the water.

11:51

- No, no, you have the obviously legally binding

11:54

user agreement that they don't read when they sign it.

11:57

There's a

11:57

sticker on

11:58

it that says, do not

11:59

use.

12:00

Do not use ever.

12:01

Don't sue us.

12:02

Also, you can't,

12:05

OK?

12:06

But like, yeah, hypothetically, you get--

12:09

man, actually, if it's light enough--

12:11

I mean, a conversion

12:12

kit would be--

12:13

yeah, if you're just selling a conversion kit,

12:15

I don't think you're really responsible,

12:17

because it's someone--

12:20

they're DIYing it, you know what I mean?

12:22

You just sell the kit.

12:23

they're responsible for their own shoddy workmanship, right?

12:27

A master never blames his

12:28

tools.

12:28

Basically a bag

12:29

of Menards supplies,

12:31

right?

12:31

Some Lowe's

12:32

screws

12:32

and a rod.

12:35

Have you bought furniture any time

12:37

in like the last six years?

12:39

Yeah, that's true.

12:39

That's all furniture is.

12:41

Yeah, you are the Ikea of hammock on the water.

12:45

Yes.

12:46

Is there a way to do collapsible boats?

12:49

Well,

12:49

that's a great, okay, David,

12:50

you have an inflatable kayak.

12:52

How

12:52

small could

12:53

you get that guy?

12:54

It becomes like, let's see, probably about a foot around

13:00

and like 2 and 1/2 feet long.

13:03

OK.

13:04

2 and 1/2 feet long?

13:05

Queen size air mattress.

13:06

That's pretty short.

13:07

Like smashed

13:08

into the bag.

13:09

Yeah, because I mean, there's still a fair amount of material.

13:11

Guys, have you seen those gigantic unicorn or inflatables

13:16

that fit six or eight people?

13:17

Yeah, my mom

13:18

has a paddle board

13:19

that you

13:19

You can have like

13:20

four people comfortably seated on

13:22

or standing

13:22

on, walking around.

13:23

It's like a tank.

13:25

It's awesome.

13:26

It's cool.

13:27

So maybe we just need like an attachment that--

13:30

Is this for turning it into

13:31

a sailboat

13:32

mechanism?

13:33

What is the attachment doing for us here?

13:36

OK.

13:38

I'm spinning this hard now.

13:40

All right.

13:41

What is it?

13:41

A jet ski.

13:42

So imagine a jet ski, but remote controlled, without--

13:46

like it just sits in front of you and pulls

13:47

your boat.

13:48

I've seen that for water skiing.

13:50

There's like a little individual jet ski like thing

13:52

that's autonomous that you can go water skiing behind.

13:55

And the handle that you're holding onto

13:56

has controls on it.

13:58

See, it's been solved.

13:59

We don't need to worry about

14:00

electricity anymore.

14:01

We just create two

14:02

kayaks and an adapter.

14:03

No.

14:04

[LAUGHTER]

14:05

I don't

14:06

know what they're running.

14:06

We need

14:06

gas now, right?

14:08

Can you make it roll coal?

14:11

Slap a diesel engine

14:13

on it.

14:14

You ready to go out for a calm afternoon summering on the lake?

14:18

(imitates boat engine revving)

14:22

- Mount a giant steel tailpipe

14:25

on the back

14:26

of your rubber

14:26

inflatable.

14:29

(laughing)

14:30

- Do you think those could

14:31

pull though?

14:32

- Drive aggressively

14:33

around sailboats

14:34

cause you're mad at a

14:34

sailboat.

14:35

- You gotta

14:35

get eight of them Russel,

14:37

and on

14:37

Dasher and Dancer and just be all holding up

14:39

in front for you.

14:41

- And then you die.

14:42

Then you disintegrate when you hit the water.

14:44

Yeah, why do all boats push?

14:47

There's got to be

14:47

some reason,

14:48

some scientific reason.

14:50

Like, why are they always in the back of the boat pushing?

14:51

Why can't we just have one that's pulling?

14:53

Frickin' sinks in the front, doesn't it?

14:55

I mean, I think that exists, but it's like an oar.

14:58

Front wheel drive.

15:00

Front wheel drive, right.

15:01

Why can't we do front wheel drive?

15:02

Why is everything

15:03

back wheel drive?

15:03

Because it's easier

15:04

to have--

15:05

You ever tried to push a shopping

15:06

cart backwards?

15:07

Yeah.

15:08

It's very difficult.

15:08

Yeah, you want to-- oh, yeah, because it's getting

15:10

steered from the back, huh?

15:12

What is the problem that you're trying to solve by moving the location of the engine?

15:17

A motor that pulls,

15:19

okay?

15:20

At the end of the day, I just want everybody to have a boat that's cost

15:25

-effective,

15:26

get

15:26

more millennials on the water, right?

15:29

More cheap skates like myself and not use dinghies.

15:33

Those things are

15:34

ugly

15:34

and I can't believe they can

15:36

be in the

15:37

water, let alone make.

15:40

And I think, yeah, I love this

15:42

recycle version.

15:43

I think that's the way to go.

15:44

A roof over every head, a chicken in every pot, a jet ski pulled inflatable party

15:49

pontoon

15:50

in every garage.

15:57

All right, David, let's hear what you got for us this week.

16:01

So my idea is basically a neighborhood-centric, hyper-local potluck app.

16:10

So like, the biggest problem is vetting, right?

16:15

It's user vetting, because obviously,

16:18

if you're going to welcome potentially a stranger

16:20

into your house, like, problem.

16:22

But I feel like there are a number of ways

16:25

you could probably do it in a fairly simple way

16:28

to confirm that a person actually lives where

16:33

they say they live, like you're actually there.

16:35

The search radius would be like something really short, right?

16:39

'cause ideally it's like something you can even walk to

16:42

rather than have to drive.

16:43

'Cause then it's like, you know,

16:45

if you can just like walk to a neighbor's house

16:47

and like they say, I am making fucking chili,

16:51

bring toppings or bring, you know,

16:54

something to go with chili,

16:55

you know?

16:56

But like, I was just kinda,

16:59

I'm getting involved with some sort of like

17:03

direct community action out here in Grand Rapids

17:06

with just sort of like providing hospitality

17:09

trying to feed people who are maybe experiencing instability.

17:13

And I don't know, I have a lot of neighbors and like every time I've gotten a chance to

17:17

like talk with them for the most part, they're cool.

17:20

They're like chill people.

17:22

Sometimes you know, you have crazy people, but around me, it's it's mostly cool.

17:26

And I don't know, I feel like we are incredibly isolated usually, you know, and like, I feel

17:33

like just sort of nothing makes you more like, okay, I feel I feel at peace. I feel like

17:42

connected to my city and my community more than like, you know, just cooking food for

17:47

people and sharing food, you know, I don't know, at least for me. That's like, I love

17:50

doing that stuff. So I was just sort of thinking I pot dot luck was one of the initial names

17:58

and I don't know if that carries water,

18:00

but like...

18:01

It's either a casino, a

18:02

leprechaun, or potluck.

18:07

I was kind of thinking about like, with user vetting, I think like,

18:11

it's probably a higher barrier of entry to host than to attend, right?

18:16

Because like, you want to make sure if someone is saying,

18:19

"I'm going to host a potluck," they're not like, doing any weird shit, you know?

18:25

I would hope that like if I feel like going the Craigslist route of like it's not ad supported

18:32

It's not try it's really not even trying to make money

18:34

It's just kind of trying to like exist

18:36

You know as a resource like that helps because then you don't really worry about like growth or any bullshit like

18:44

that

18:44

It's more just

18:44

like a useful tool

18:47

Bear bear probably pretty bare-bones interface and then I like something along the lines of like you say, okay

18:52

I'm making food and I have room for two extra plates at the table basically.

18:58

And so only two people get to sign up and once it's full, it's full and like you can't

19:03

even see it to avoid extra people showing up.

19:07

And like I think you'd probably also have to go by like basement show rules where the

19:15

your address is not posted anywhere

19:17

and you basically

19:18

get notified of the people who are

19:20

going to attend and you tell them your address.

19:23

Because otherwise, you just don't want cops showing up.

19:29

It's got to be

19:29

cool.

19:31

It's a brownie party, boys.

19:32

It's got to

19:32

be on the DL.

19:33

Post

19:34

free food here.

19:36

I don't know.

19:37

I feel like I don't want to do this shit on Facebook.

19:39

I don't want to do this shit on Instagram.

19:41

I don't want to do this shit on anything like that, because all that stuff is too public.

19:48

I feel like it

19:49

would be impossible

19:49

to totally avoid bad actors, probably.

19:52

- Chat roulette or Omegle for food.

19:56

- Chat roulette with my neighbors, which

19:58

is--

19:59

- I

19:59

don't know, yeah, I feel like it'd be fun.

20:01

- That's

20:01

kinda cool. - I feel like it

20:01

would be fun.

20:03

But it's not bulletproof, for

20:05

sure.

20:05

- With an Uber-like rating system

20:07

so you can avoid the one-star weirdo

20:09

who made arsenic pie or whatever.

20:11

- Yeah, I think it's one of those things

20:15

where it's like you'd either have to,

20:17

it's a one strike and you're out type thing,

20:20

you know?

20:21

Like I feel like there would have to be like actual,

20:24

like you just don't get to do this anymore,

20:26

you know, type things.

20:28

But then you

20:29

can't really like run

20:30

background

20:31

checks

20:31

on every person who uses it.

20:33

But

20:33

like,

20:33

I feel like some sort of like

20:34

local identity verification.

20:36

- I don't want any of the safety features, man.

20:38

I just wanna go in

20:39

and I just wanna see what the hell happens.

20:41

- I mean--

20:42

- Let's play with that roulette.

20:43

That's why it's called roulette.

20:45

- So yeah,

20:45

like there's the safety version, right?

20:47

I'm almost thinking that would be fun, Scott.

20:50

Seriously,

20:50

though.

20:50

Pop that career.

20:51

College kids.

20:52

The

20:52

only reason I see my neighbors--

20:53

this is the street I live on.

20:55

The only reason I see my neighbors

20:56

is when all the cops come outside one

20:58

house.

20:58

Right.

20:59

And then all the neighbors come out,

21:00

and they all just kind of gawk, and we

21:01

call that neighborhood get-togethers.

21:02

You see your

21:02

neighbors, you give them the nod,

21:04

they give you the nod, and they're like, OK,

21:05

what's going

21:05

on?

21:06

Right.

21:06

It would be very interesting to do a roulette game of dinner

21:09

parties with them.

21:10

I'd be into

21:10

it.

21:11

I mean, it might be a disaster, you know?

21:14

Or it might be like you find common ground,

21:16

and you share a nice meal,

21:18

and at least then you feel more welcome

21:21

in the place where you live, you know?

21:23

- I think that's it.

21:24

I would love a round robin kind of idea,

21:28

right?

21:28

So let's say you get 10 neighbors in the community

21:31

to commit to, hey, every week

21:34

we're gonna round

21:35

robin.

21:37

Potluck, we come to your house, you come to my

21:39

house.

21:39

We get to know each other, right?

21:41

It's kind of like the post-block party

21:45

hangover

21:46

to meet

21:47

your neighbors, right?

21:48

And if you could have like--

21:50

yeah, it's just that would be really, I think, cool, casual.

21:54

You don't have to worry about too many safety features.

21:56

It's not open

21:57

to the

21:58

public as

21:59

much.

21:59

It's more like, hey, this block, 22nd Street on Next Door

22:04

wants to do a round robin.

22:05

You want to jump

22:06

in?

22:07

Yeah, I like that.

22:08

Yeah, you can vet it, right?

22:10

So maybe

22:10

in a way--

22:11

And Next Door already has the vetting

22:12

of where you have to verify your address and stuff.

22:15

this almost seems like a feature of that platform

22:17

or something, yeah.

22:18

- Yeah, I could totally see it being

22:19

as like

22:20

sort of a spin off of that.

22:22

And like again, you know, it's like,

22:24

I think there's a part of me that's like very weird

22:28

about like data collection and stuff like that,

22:30

you know what I mean?

22:31

'Cause I mean,

22:33

but it's

22:33

also a bit of like,

22:35

well, it's all, that ship's sailed, you know?

22:38

It's

22:38

already like,

22:40

I don't know.

22:40

- They already know.

22:41

- Yeah. - Right.

22:42

- And I think the coordination of like 10 different families

22:46

and trying to round robin between 10 different dinners

22:50

across 10 different weeks,

22:52

managing vacations

22:53

and time off,

22:54

this app would solve all of that headache

22:57

and now it would just be,

22:59

all right, we're meeting the neighbor across the street

23:01

that we've, I mean like in a way,

23:03

I've lived in this house for four, five, nine

23:06

years?

23:06

Shoot.

23:07

And I barely know a lot of my neighbors.

23:11

I know of them, but I, you know.

23:14

- Yeah.

23:15

- Not gonna knock on their door for a cup of sugar.

23:16

- Right.

23:17

- Right?

23:17

- The people-- - That's too sketch.

23:19

- Like the people behind us,

23:22

they threw some dope ass parties.

23:24

They were very cool.

23:25

They were super duper welcoming,

23:26

like aggressively welcoming, you know?

23:28

And the people who moved, they moved out,

23:30

and the people who moved in were perfectly nice,

23:32

but you know, had four children, no time, you know?

23:36

And they're moving, and it's like,

23:38

well, maybe the next neighbors will be cool,

23:40

Or maybe I just need to be the cool neighbor.

23:43

That might

23:43

be what

23:44

I need to do.

23:45

- It's gotta start somewhere.

23:46

- Right.

23:46

- What a cool way to introduce somebody

23:48

to the neighborhood too.

23:49

Like, hey, join the Ron Robbin app.

23:50

We have

23:51

10 neighbors that would love to

23:52

just get to know you,

23:54

have you over for dinner

23:55

while you

23:56

do your move-ins

23:57

and whatever, right?

23:58

- Absolutely.

23:59

- Way better than a drop off of cookies or jello, right?

24:01

Hey,

24:02

nice,

24:02

welcome you to the neighborhood,

24:03

bye.

24:04

Like, we'll see you later.

24:06

- Right.

24:07

I mean,

24:07

it's funny 'cause it's like,

24:09

In some ways, I think the internet has usurped that

24:13

in a really huge way.

24:16

And it's nice to be able to pick your friends,

24:20

because I'm sure you end up with some awkward conversations

24:24

with your people.

24:25

But then it's also like, I don't know,

24:26

it would be kind of nice to know the people around you

24:29

well enough where it's like, oh shit, I need a tool.

24:31

I can just go ask my neighbor if they have a tool and borrow it

24:34

and--

24:35

rather than having to pay in Home Depot or something

24:38

to get,

24:39

like, to rent a tool if your neighbor literally has it,

24:42

you know?

24:43

Episode 21.

24:44

So true.

24:45

I think, like, yeah, you're going

24:46

to vibe with certain neighbors

24:48

around Robin

24:49

better than you would, you know, eight of the 10.

24:52

I think it could be fun.

24:55

But yeah, the Pot Dot Luck, or--

24:58

Pot Dot Luck.

24:59

I don't know.

25:00

I feel like there would be other pun names that

25:03

would work better.

25:04

Dot Luck.

25:06

I don't know.

25:06

I'm hosting a Dot Luck next week.

25:08

- Yeah, oh, just dot look I think is good, yeah.

25:11

- Man, you could do this for,

25:12

you know, I organized a block party a long time ago

25:15

and

25:15

it was

25:15

hard.

25:16

It's just like, well, it could be,

25:19

it's just that you don't know

25:20

and like there's weather delays

25:22

and you just wish you could communicate with everybody

25:24

about the events or

25:26

whatever.

25:28

- I mean, Facebook neighborhood

25:30

groups

25:31

are pretty good for that.

25:33

You know, we have an okay one, but I don't know.

25:36

It's also hard because it's like, you kind of just have to be welcoming and make a point

25:43

of it, even if it's kind of weird or awkward, you know?

25:46

It just kind of has

25:47

to...

25:48

Yeah.

25:48

I think this

25:49

summer I would like to just kind of throw some backyard parties.

25:54

Just kind of just a post, "Hey, we're chilling.

25:57

Come

25:57

grill."

25:58

Because

25:58

I

25:59

like doing that.

26:04

Scott.

26:05

Scott,

26:06

what do you have for us?

26:09

- Thank you, David.

26:10

Okay, I got something a little different this week.

26:13

I do not actually have an idea.

26:16

However, I have a market.

26:18

I have hundreds of thousands of contact names

26:21

in that market, which as Russell, you and I know,

26:24

is probably one of the most important parts

26:25

of trying to get a product out in the world.

26:28

It's not even a niche market, it's big.

26:30

And I have no idea what to sell, either product or service.

26:34

and I want to Spitball what we should do with that.

26:37

So I was literally, I saw a movie last night.

26:40

I saw Mickey 17, it's good.

26:43

But the credits came up and they just kept going

26:45

and going and going.

26:46

And I realized every one of these is a name of someone

26:49

in the movie industry, not even just the actors,

26:52

but the producers, all the people on the light sets

26:56

and costume and everything.

26:57

All these people are in the niche market

27:00

of the movie industry.

27:01

You could easily find them on LinkedIn or IMDB or some form.

27:05

There's thousands upon thousands of movies out there that you could go and

27:09

capture all these names and put them on a list and just mass spam them

27:13

with some product or service.

27:15

What do you sell a bunch of people that have been in movies in the background?

27:19

Oh, cool.

27:20

First thing

27:20

that came to mind was just like some kind of trophy that

27:24

memorializes their role in that film.

27:26

So you take all the people from Mickey 17, you'd be like, "I'm going to give

27:30

you this special collectible coin or like a lasered out on acrylic frame that

27:36

shows their credit page with their name on it highlighted or something and then

27:40

you just you know hundreds of letters or emails or whatever way and just make

27:43

them to order as they come in that's that is all I've got so far I've been

27:47

thinking about this about seven minutes what

27:49

if you either scraped IMDB or tore

27:53

optical character recognition and AI loose on those

27:56

credits itself

27:57

and

27:57

assembled the database and sold that as the contact sharing directory to the

28:01

other people who might want to know, network in Hollywood. Oh, you want to

28:05

know who some of the best sound designers are

28:10

on set?

28:10

This guy's been in 37 movies.

28:13

Oh, that is clever.

28:14

I

28:14

think that IMDB kind of does that, but do they do that with like second grips and

28:20

stuff like that? Like background whatevers? I bet that there's value in

28:24

and having a comprehensive list of everyone

28:26

who's been in there.

28:27

And there are special rules in those credits, Scott,

28:29

for what they mean.

28:30

Like if you have people who wrote the movie

28:33

and it's A-N-D, two people,

28:35

that's different than ampersand

28:37

people,

28:38

whether they

28:38

collaborated on it together

28:39

or one of them wrote it and the

28:40

other one rewrote it.

28:42

There's like a structure to credits and what they mean.

28:44

It's almost its own little like database

28:46

that you could scrape.

28:48

You could get trends on what songs have been most popular

28:50

across the decades.

28:53

You could get all kinds of stuff.

28:54

The

28:54

thing, this is like very easy to do.

28:57

It would not be hard to create a tool that could do that

28:59

scraping for it.

29:00

You just have to pirate every movie.

29:02

Yeah, and like you said, this, like every Sundance Film Festival producer would

29:06

be like,

29:07

oh my gosh, we can get expert, like D-list talent, right?

29:12

That's seen the real good

29:13

stuff.

29:14

And you hire them to do the Sundance film that's going to make it to their, you know,

29:18

instead of the fourth grip, they're the first grip now because they did a Sundance, whatever

29:23

one night interesting I love that idea though selling the plaque I am always

29:29

curious

29:29

like in

29:30

the back of the film they want recognition to write totally

29:34

and then you Facebook target add them were you the assistant dolly on

29:40

super-targeted assistant

29:42

dolly who was born on the 4th of July and I love too

29:48

hard and yes my director bought me this plaque sell him a t-shirt with exactly

29:54

that I love it

29:55

that'd be funny you just have the whole credits and then their

29:59

name highlighted

30:00

oh I wonder if there's something to that no hold on what if

30:07

there you sold them

30:08

a movie what's

30:09

a physical representation of the whole

30:10

credits a flipbook what if you sold them a flipbook and when you flip through it

30:15

all it is is just the credits frame by frame,

30:18

but then their name is circled.

30:19

You add in the circle.

30:20

And you can be like, hey,

30:22

here's

30:22

a memento of the thing

30:23

that you did.

30:24

A scroll.

30:25

A scroll that like-- a

30:26

long

30:26

scroll.

30:27

Yeah, Star Wars style.

30:29

And you can do it on physical paper.

30:30

A lot of credits are artsy.

30:31

Oh,

30:31

yeah.

30:31

Yeah.

30:32

That's meant to be fun.

30:33

And then you can see like, oh, yeah, I was the--

30:35

I remember that.

30:37

--microphone holder for the whatever.

30:38

Yeah.

30:39

That

30:39

would be really scalable too, right?

30:41

Because you just get like-- you print the same credits

30:43

over and over again.

30:44

And you could just, for every order,

30:46

you just manually put a sticker over the name.

30:48

Right.

30:50

And now you're just like--

30:51

Got

30:51

to hope a lot of orders are coming in, though.

30:53

Yeah, and

30:54

then if you could frame the scroll in a way

30:57

where it's preset to their thing, but at any point in time

31:00

they can press a button, right?

31:01

And it can scroll through all the credits,

31:05

or

31:05

literally the old Roman

31:06

scrolls.

31:09

That

31:09

would be interesting.

31:11

For a couple past projects that we did,

31:14

These were like very in-depth, very awful engineering projects that took months or years.

31:20

And at the end of them, we would order like a little hexagonal PCB with like the project etched in the front and like the date or something on the back.

31:29

And we'd have them as like tokens, like, "Hey, oh, you survived that project? That's awesome."

31:33

And keep them as collectibles on your desk.

31:35

Just do that.

31:36

Have the movie, make a bunch of these tokens, have the movie on one side, print them one for every person in the credits.

31:41

and then

31:42

serialize or whatever,

31:44

put their name on the back if they order these.

31:46

And then be, you gotta collect all the movies

31:48

you've been in, you know?

31:49

Or you can

31:49

show 'em off to your friends.

31:49

- That's not a bad idea. - Something up on your wall.

31:51

- What about like one of those,

31:54

one of those like picture frame,

31:56

like digital picture frame things?

31:58

Where, I don't know exactly how you do this,

32:01

but like you take like a little snippet screenshot

32:05

of every credit, like from the credits of every movie

32:08

they've been in where their name

32:10

appears.

32:10

- There it is,

32:10

yep.

32:11

just scrolling with all of the different names and all the different fonts.

32:16

I don't know.

32:16

That'd be cool.

32:17

Yeah.

32:18

Consolidation of all their work.

32:19

Right.

32:20

Right.

32:20

Into just this long.

32:22

I don't know.

32:22

I like

32:23

that.

32:23

I,

32:24

all of these could work, honestly.

32:26

I don't think there's a right answer.

32:28

People love merch, right?

32:29

People

32:29

love merch about

32:30

themselves.

32:31

Yeah.

32:31

Oh yeah.

32:32

Oh, you target their friends and family.

32:34

Whether it's something that you don't.

32:36

Like this would be a great gift.

32:37

I mean,

32:38

so like if there was a tool, like a

32:40

website to

32:41

So here's Doyle Lewis, here's all the films he's been in.

32:45

If you want to create memorabilia or buy it for him--

32:48

Absolutely.

32:49

Yeah.

32:50

People are proud of their kids or whatever, right?

32:53

Definitely.

32:54

That might actually be cool, too.

32:55

You were joking, David.

32:57

And my director bought me this shirt.

32:59

But if you have the

33:00

production company or whatever

33:02

able to place a bulk order for everyone

33:04

as their thank you for working on this gift,

33:06

it seems like an easy way to get a couple hundred orders.

33:08

I mean, there's-- listen, I feel like the floor

33:11

pretty low. There's some real dog shit rap gifts out there, you know, and just just some like, you know,

33:18

the Bourne identity not even in the movie font, you know, just in like Ariel, you know, like on a t-shirt.

33:24

On a mug. Right, exactly.

33:25

Yeah.

33:26

It's I feel like that wouldn't even be very expensive, like none of this shit would

33:29

be expensive, you know.

33:31

I like my favorites the scroll idea.

33:32

I like that a

33:33

lot. The credits but in flat form like an old ancient scroll.

33:37

That's cool. Yes, that would be fun. Yeah, like get the the weathered paper so you could just be like

33:44

You know

33:46

Maybe you can have the poster on one side and this and the credits on the other right?

33:50

Oh, that'd be cool

33:51

How legal we

33:52

could or how far you get without getting sued for trademarking?

33:55

Let's push a lot of like a lot of triple

33:58

-a movies make like a thing

34:00

of their credits, too

34:01

They're like they've got the art your characters like dancing around the credits and stuff, right?

34:05

So this might border on infringement.

34:08

I don't know.

34:10

- It doesn't have to be the produced credits, right?

34:12

It could just be our own version

34:13

of

34:13

parody credits.

34:15

We put a...

34:16

- Right.

34:17

- Parody credits.

34:18

- How does parody law work?

34:19

We gotta talk about that.

34:20

I'm one

34:21

of these spit-falsies.

34:21

- I feel like you could play pretty fast and loose with it.

34:25

Listen, I don't know, man.

34:26

Is anybody gonna be checking on this shit in like a year

34:31

once the United States

34:32

like is no

34:33

longer a thing, you know?

34:34

When the US Patent and Copyright Office is shut down.

34:38

Right,

34:38

exactly.

34:39

Maybe that won't happen because that's

34:41

like--

34:41

Corporate interests.

34:43

Exactly,

34:43

yeah.

34:43

The oligarchs, Disney, whatever.

34:45

The very last thing to go.

34:48

Who owns the patent office now?

34:49

Is it Elon, or is it--

34:51

Disney.

34:52

Bezos is his point.

34:53

Disney, Disney, that's it.

35:00

All right, Leo, what have you brought this week?

35:02

All right, y'all been to Sam's Club in the last two years?

35:05

Costco?

35:05

I'm not familiar.

35:06

Costco's

35:07

the better Sam's Club, and we all know it.

35:08

But if you end up slumming it in a Sam's Club,

35:12

they have

35:13

taken the high school janitor's floor cleaner

35:17

that you ride on, and they've made it self-driving.

35:19

And it's the coolest thing to watch in the world.

35:21

All day long,

35:22

this thing's

35:23

just going, beep, beep,

35:24

and driving around and going back up and down the aisles.

35:26

And not only is it autonomously cleaning the floors,

35:29

but it has a stick with a camera on it,

35:32

and it's taking inventory of all the shelves.

35:34

- What?

35:35

- It's so

35:35

cool.

35:36

It's how it drives.

35:37

It'll just like stop and wait for people

35:39

with their carts to go by and stuff,

35:40

and then it'll just keep going

35:41

and it beeps every 10 seconds.

35:42

It's so fun.

35:43

I love it, and I'm very inspired by it.

35:45

Parallel to that, I know, that's already,

35:47

that's not even a pitch, that's a product that exists.

35:49

- That's amazing. - Parallel to that,

35:51

we have in our town,

35:54

one of thousands of Midwest festivals that happen.

35:57

We love our festivals around here.

35:59

And in order to prepare our town for it,

36:02

Our grounds and city hall and all that

36:05

go crazy with beautification, including street sweepers.

36:09

We have so many of them.

36:10

I know autonomous vehicles are very hard,

36:14

but what if you had an autonomous vehicle

36:15

whose only job was to stick real close to the curb

36:18

and street sweep?

36:20

It seems like the perfect usage, the perfect little niche

36:24

for baby's first self-driving.

36:27

My pitch--

36:28

I don't think that would necessarily

36:29

be that hard.

36:30

No.

36:31

Take

36:31

my Roomba and put it outside?

36:33

(laughing)

36:34

Roomba, street sweeper, outdoor,

36:37

self-driving street sweepers, yes.

36:39

It seems like--

36:40

Why not?

36:40

You'd have the camera so you could do the whole like,

36:44

you know, mapping out of all the streets and stuff

36:46

and have an up-to-date map of, I don't know,

36:49

what would you wanna have real-time information on?

36:51

It's like Street View but daily updated, right?

36:53

And it's just going

36:54

around.

36:54

It's gotta be the size of like a Zamboni or smaller,

36:57

a little thing.

36:58

Full-size driven street sweepers are not that

37:00

big.

37:01

They are like half a car.

37:02

I love the idea.

37:03

And I'm trying to figure out what other data you

37:06

could collect to make it an easier

37:07

sell to the municipality.

37:09

Like, our town is notorious for if you have not

37:13

cut your lawn in a reasonable time,

37:15

they will put

37:15

a little ticket on your door

37:16

and be like,

37:16

hey, guys, you got to do that.

37:18

We'll find you.

37:19

Well, this robot actually hops up and trims out the lawn, too.

37:22

I forgot

37:22

to mention that.

37:23

It's got blades on the back.

37:24

Of course, of course.

37:26

Yes.

37:26

Yeah, it's got citation management.

37:30

You just put in a fence and you didn't pull a permit.

37:32

This

37:33

vehicle's not registered.

37:34

The robot

37:34

saw, yeah, right.

37:36

It's got like the equivalent of like a pigeon launcher,

37:40

but the pigeon is just like a disc

37:43

with a bunch of tickets

37:44

like stapled

37:45

to the other side.

37:47

Just shoots it inside your window as it goes

37:49

by.

37:49

Through a brick full of citations.

37:51

Yeah, exactly.

37:53

Each one's stuck into the hole,

37:55

that it just yeah

37:56

we are teetering on the edge of powered mail delivery

37:59

robots

38:00

I think here

38:01

this thing

38:02

is the mailman - it shoots you packages right

38:05

it yeah

38:07

couldn't be more American we gave the mailman a gun this pitch evolved

38:15

quick

38:15

yeah but seriously getting

38:19

back to the core right this thing hugs the curb the

38:21

whole time.

38:22

Yeah.

38:22

It goes slow.

38:23

It's like cautious by nature.

38:25

It's something that people are already trained to go around.

38:28

You could absolutely take an existing street sweeper

38:32

and retrofit this thing.

38:33

I cannot imagine that they have a very complicated driving

38:36

pattern.

38:36

They got to

38:36

go around trash cans

38:38

and parked cars,

38:39

and that's about the hardest

38:40

that it gets, right?

38:42

I mean, that sort of lower speed decision making is--

38:47

I mean, it's a solved problem for

38:49

sure.

38:49

They can do it in a Sam's Club where people are walking around with

38:52

their

38:52

toddlers.

38:53

Yeah, for sure.

38:53

That's the

38:54

speed that this thing needs to go.

38:55

It works all day,

38:57

all night.

38:58

Doesn't

38:58

sleep.

38:59

Yes.

38:59

You don't have to pay

39:00

it.

39:00

Hell, and you don't have to get it healthcare, you

39:02

know.

39:03

That's

39:03

right.

39:03

To our city parks department.

39:04

I'm sorry.

39:05

I'm gunning for your job.

39:06

It never says that it wants to work from home, you know,

39:12

unlike the existing

39:13

street sweeper drivers.

39:14

Right.

39:15

But you can imagine a fleet of 10 of these things, right?

39:18

They come back to their charging station like a Roomba.

39:20

Yeah.

39:21

Could we just have it so the street sweepers work from home?

39:24

We just give them a remote control in there.

39:26

Like, we take out all the AI part of this

39:29

and just

39:29

have them drive the robot.

39:32

At least there's a stopgap until we can get the AI part

39:34

figured

39:35

out.

39:35

And then five Indonesian children

39:35

are remote controlling

39:36

this.

39:36

Yes.

39:37

Uh-huh.

39:38

Uh-huh.

39:38

Yep.

39:39

You got it.

39:41

But damn, they'd be better than any American driver

39:44

behind

39:44

the wheel.

39:44

Of course they would.

39:45

Yeah, for real.

39:46

even with a couple seconds of latency.

39:50

- They're like professional gamers

39:52

just cleaning the entire city in 30 minutes.

39:56

- They're all Rainbow Six Siege

39:57

high tier people.

40:01

- Downtown Kalamazoo speed run 80%.

40:03

- They can do

40:03

7,000 ping and they'll beat you

40:06

every single day. - So Pivoting,

40:07

this is now

40:07

a thing that Twitch has, right?

40:10

So we are

40:11

going to turn this into a sport

40:14

that

40:14

people can compete.

40:15

Twitch clean streets.

40:16

Exactly.

40:17

So anyone can plug in their controller and open your app,

40:20

and you're suddenly in control of a street sweeper

40:23

across these United States.

40:25

OK, you could seriously--

40:28

if you created a device that could pick up trash

40:31

in some form and gamified it

40:32

in that

40:32

way--

40:33

No joke, though.

40:33

--and you can control it--

40:34

Oh, man.

40:36

The little park cleanup bot.

40:36

You just solved global warming

40:38

right there.

40:38

Absolutely.

40:38

You turn park cleanup 2025 simulator

40:41

into a remote control robot thing.

40:43

That's

40:44

great.

40:46

I'm the beach cleaner guy.

40:47

I love that.

40:47

I

40:48

mean, I genuinely think a lot about like,

40:50

if the government decided that they were gonna do

40:53

universal basic income, but they were still mad about people

40:57

like maybe not working, you could do a make work program

41:00

of a whole bunch of things like that.

41:02

You could even do like, I've been watching a lot of like,

41:05

biology type videos where people just go out for surveys

41:08

of like bugs and snakes and stuff.

41:11

And it's really funny to be how much of that work

41:13

Just walking around, finding bugs, you know,

41:16

finding creatures.

41:18

Like, I feel like you could do like a distributed

41:21

citizen science and just have like a bunch of yokels

41:23

walking around being like,

41:24

"I seen a bird with my camera, look!"

41:28

You know, and you just

41:29

like, "Oh, look

41:30

a bird!"

41:30

I don't know, I mean, that feels like that would be,

41:32

if that was my job, man, that would be awesome.

41:36

I would love that.

41:38

Get paid to walk around in the woods

41:40

and look at creatures for a survey.

41:43

Get paid to sit at home and do street sweeping simulator

41:48

2025, but it's real and I'm actually helping.

41:52

Yeah.

41:52

The market's there.

41:53

The market is absolutely there.

41:55

If

41:55

people will drive Euro Truck Simulator.

41:57

I mean, if people will do forklift

41:59

simulator and

42:01

power

42:02

washing simulator, people

42:04

like doing stuff.

42:04

There's a pitch.

42:05

Power washing simulator plug-in, but it's actually

42:08

cleaning

42:09

your local community

42:10

centers.

42:11

- Whoa, that'd be great.

42:11

- We need a Spitball on that.

42:13

I wanna go hard on that.

42:15

- Absolutely.

42:16

- It's Ender's game,

42:17

but it's

42:18

just helpful.

42:19

- They

42:19

flip it to real life without you even knowing.

42:21

- Right,

42:22

it's just a nice thing.

42:23

- That's literally what I wrote down, Ender's game.

42:25

(laughing)

42:27

For street sweeping.

42:29

- Ender, don't be mad.

42:30

This whole time you've actually been

42:31

cleaning

42:32

the homeless shelter.

42:33

- All

42:33

you need is a Snapchat filter

42:35

that makes it look like a game.

42:36

like takes in real life images and you know,

42:39

takes out all the resolution.

42:41

You must never lose in order to win.

42:44

And then you just get paid money all of a sudden, right?

42:47

You're like,

42:47

holy cow,

42:48

I'm making money or something.

42:49

- I mean, it would be great.

42:50

- And no, seriously, it would not

42:51

be hard

42:51

to make a power washing robot

42:53

that you can remote

42:54

control from anywhere.

42:54

- It would be

42:54

really not hard.

42:55

- Just a couple

42:55

of, a power washer,

42:57

like some kind of shaft that goes up and down

42:59

with an angle on

43:00

it.

43:00

- Right. - Oh my God.

43:01

- Well, you need also, you know,

43:03

if you're gonna do a robot,

43:04

You also have to have image recognition

43:07

so you're not giving people fluid injection injuries.

43:09

No, that's all on the person driving the thing.

43:12

This is America.

43:13

We don't have safety.

43:14

How does it get set up and plugged in?

43:17

You hire one guy, and he

43:19

runs around and drops it off.

43:20

One really, really stressed out guy with a laptop.

43:22

That's

43:22

usually how

43:23

it works.

43:23

He's got

43:23

20 of these things in his garage,

43:25

and he just drops it off and runs to the next place.

43:28

There needs to

43:29

be five guys with laptops,

43:31

and they're all still kind of stressed.

43:33

But there's only one.

43:35

- But at least they work from home.

43:36

- Well, they work from, it's one of those things

43:38

where it's remote, but it's like 50% travel.

43:41

But the travel would be local, so it'd be fine, you know.

43:44

(laughing)

43:45

- It's just down to my coffee shop.

43:47

- I'm sorry I

43:47

drove the street

43:48

sweeper

43:49

through that brick wall.

43:50

I

43:50

was on the airplane wifi

43:51

and I

43:52

got some

43:53

lag.

43:54

(laughing)

43:55

- Okay, hear me out.

43:56

Could you just like triple your human cost on there

44:00

and have like three people all controlling the same one?

44:02

and then as a fail safe, do it Age of

44:05

Empires style.

44:06

-Oh, so like

44:07

three people controlling

44:08

the same player.

44:09

-You're all trying to do

44:10

the same thing and there's a right and wrong answer,

44:12

but if two of the three say that this person's wrong,

44:14

then they get negative points or something.

44:16

-Consensus model.

44:18

It's like the opposite of a firing squad,

44:22

where only one person

44:23

has the bullet.

44:25

[laughter]

44:25

-As

44:26

long as it was score-based and really horrible.

44:29

-It weights them based off

44:31

of how good their driving's been in the

44:32

past.

44:32

- Yeah, based on the other two.

44:34

And as long as all three of you are the same, then.

44:36

- Well, I mean, you're accruing a score.

44:37

I've got a 4.9 rating in my staying between the lines

44:40

and you're only a 2.6.

44:42

- It's out of 10, man.

44:43

- Oh, fun.

44:44

- What if, okay, local residents

44:46

just bought street sweepers, okay?

44:49

Hypothetically,

44:50

okay?

44:52

Government incentivizes them.

44:53

All right, you buy this special street sweeper,

44:56

you get all the compost that comes out of it,

44:58

hypothetically.

44:59

It's a lot of free, like, what is,

45:02

Do you know, Leo, if people take all those leaves

45:05

and they just throw it in the dump?

45:06

Are they composting

45:08

it?

45:08

There is such thing as a vacuum truck

45:10

that's different than the street sweeper that just brushes,

45:12

but doesn't actually--

45:14

Oh, I guess that's what they

45:15

do.

45:15

They don't pick up

45:15

any of the materials.

45:17

But there is-- what you're describing does exist also.

45:19

So yeah, we could have a fleet of vacuum trucks.

45:22

[LAUGHS]

45:23

And you get the compost from it.

45:26

I think

45:26

that compost is one of these hidden revenue sources.

45:31

and I thought maybe this would be a--

45:33

- Isn't compost expensive?

45:34

Compost is like--

45:35

- No idea.

45:36

- Guys, it's like eight bucks a pound.

45:37

- You can make your own free compost,

45:39

but people don't wanna do it.

45:40

- It's

45:40

a lot of work.

45:42

And I thought maybe

45:42

you can take all

45:44

the community leaves

45:45

and just boom, compost it.

45:47

- I think you definitely can.

45:49

I mean, Grand Rapids does like civic yard waste collection.

45:54

You know, they do a good job with that.

45:56

I'm assuming, well, I hope it doesn't get incinerated,

45:59

but it

45:59

probably does.

46:00

products that they collect get filtered and then sold to

46:05

Soil making

46:05

place like six bucks a bag or something really good stuff, you know, yeah

46:10

Yeah,

46:10

cuz they turned they did all of that, you know

46:13

Work that it takes right?

46:15

Yeah. Yeah,

46:16

I mean I like

46:18

I like collecting the like just the piles of like rotten leaves

46:24

That like collect around my house and it's like well sweep that up and dump it on you know stuff

46:29

I want to grow it's it's already dirt by the time it comes spring,

46:33

you know

46:33

Mm-hmm.

46:34

I don't really I don't really mow my lawn ever or like I raked leaves for a few years

46:40

And then I discover the joy of mowing your

46:42

leaves and

46:42

mulching it all that is been my last two years

46:45

Lifehack

46:46

absolute game changer. Yeah, they get too high just

46:49

mow it. We have a street collection system in

46:53

Our local town here. They'll come twice a year and pick up your your sticks and stuff from the curbside

46:59

and

47:00

that

47:00

all gets shuffled away.

47:02

Another great candidate for dump truck

47:05

front end loader

47:06

simulator people.

47:08

(laughing)

47:08

- Ab-so

47:09

-lutely.

47:10

- That'd be fun. - Oh yeah.

47:11

- I love this.

47:12

This

47:12

is morphing

47:13

into autonomous vehicle video

47:15

gamification.

47:16

This is fun.

47:17

- That would be awesome.

47:18

I mean, you know that's going to be a genre of job,

47:23

like certainly within our lifetimes, right?

47:25

Like 100%?

47:26

- It's never dawned

47:27

on me, but yeah,

47:28

This is probably not untreaded ground.

47:30

- Right, like you just add something to your lawnmower

47:32

and now somebody mows your lawn.

47:34

It's like Uber,

47:35

you just hit a button

47:36

and it just mows your lawn.

47:38

Turns left and right.

47:40

This is, Scott, you made this whole autonomous snowplow.

47:44

It's too hard to make the robot version, right?

47:47

So like you just get the human version.

47:49

- Tell me about your snowplow.

47:51

What's the deal with the

47:51

snowplow?

47:52

- Durabot.

47:52

That

47:53

was

47:53

our senior design

47:54

project.

47:55

We thought we were so clever.

47:57

And then Michigan, we made a prototype.

47:59

And then Michigan Tech that winter

48:01

had a contest for all the students

48:03

to make autonomous snowplows.

48:04

And they beat the absolute crap out of what we made.

48:07

So yeah, we let that patent die and moved on.

48:10

Michigan

48:11

Tech did that?

48:11

You didn't sue them?

48:12

Of course

48:12

they

48:13

did.

48:14

Those engineers are nuts.

48:15

They have nothing to do

48:16

up there except be good engineers.

48:17

What was the biggest difference?

48:19

Like, what was it that made it so much more of a killer app?

48:24

Well,

48:24

Michigan Tech--

48:25

Why was theirs better?

48:26

Yeah, yeah, why was their snow pile just so much superior?

48:30

Was

48:30

it a bunch of things?

48:30

All the things ours was

48:31

bouncing around using an invisible dog

48:33

fence as its perimeter and trying to go straight lines.

48:36

Do you

48:36

have any idea

48:37

how hard it is to make

48:38

a robot go in a straight line?

48:40

It's obscenely difficult.

48:43

I don't

48:43

care how many compasses

48:44

and accelerometers and crap on it,

48:45

it'll always start to weave, which

48:47

is why I like your sidewalk sweeper, Leo,

48:49

because it has

48:50

a curb to follow.

48:51

It just-- I know where I'm at, and I just

48:53

keep going from there.

48:54

98% of the time it's literally on a track.

48:57

- That's so much easier.

48:58

It can cross the street.

48:59

I can go to straight

49:00

line for, you know,

49:01

20 feet before I get the curb again.

49:03

- Also, I have to imagine things have gotten

49:05

a little bit better since you attempted that, Scott.

49:08

- Yeah, there's probably a couple more LIDAR

49:10

off the shelf kits and

49:11

stuff.

49:12

- Yeah, that's right.

49:12

That was 10 years ago.

49:14

- A lot of this stuff has been kind of like

49:16

made a lot easier even in those 10 years.

49:19

- Would you mow your lawn from your computer?

49:21

- Never. - Or snowplow?

49:22

- Never.

49:23

- Hill plow, yes,

49:24

100%.

49:25

Yeah, that would be fun.

49:26

I would love that.

49:27

- I fantasized about

49:28

the little lawn mowing robots a lot.

49:31

You can get them for under a grand now.

49:33

The little Hertz Covina Roomba, but for lawn mowing.

49:37

They're

49:37

sweet.

49:38

- I would love that.

49:38

- That's awesome.

49:39

- No, I probably wouldn't do it for my computer,

49:41

but if I could pay a robot to do it, I would.

49:43

- See, okay, that's what I'm wondering.

49:45

Like, would you Roomba your house

49:47

if you could remote control it from your computer?

49:49

Like, all right, I got a vacuum.

49:51

- That?

49:51

- Can I get

49:51

to my desk?

49:53

I but snow plowing I have so little snow to plow that I think it would be fun

49:58

Pull out the Xbox controller and

50:00

yeah couch

50:00

for an hour and a half vacuuming right under your feet,

50:04

right?

50:05

like

50:07

Sorry, that's amazing. Well, I mean that's what we're doing for lawn mowing and snow plowing right in

50:12

a way

50:13

I I think the biggest issue with that is like as soon as you control a video game vehicle

50:19

You immediately start driving like a dumbass

50:22

Like instantly, you know, and so I think you'd have to really fight the impulse to like

50:29

Crash the shit

50:30

out of your thing for fun. You know,

50:32

I forgot this wasn't Grand Theft Auto right ran over a hooker

50:35

Yeah, this is

50:36

it for tonight. I can't like ramp my shit off of like a hundred like meter cliff and be fine

50:42

You know,

50:42

okay totally different tangent

50:44

on there

50:44

You

50:45

said Xbox

50:46

controller mowing your lawn is snow plowing driveway or whatever

50:49

Could you do it once where you drive it yourself and follow it around?

50:53

Like record it and then just dead reckoning do it the next time just hit play and have it go again

50:59

I think

50:59

so you'd have to do a lot of like built-in course

51:04

Automatic course correction. Yes, we got LIDAR we could

51:07

yeah. Yeah

51:15

- Yeah, a mouse is fine.

51:16

You can do that one time and it'll just repeat.

51:18

I think there are so many weird little,

51:22

snow plowing especially, you're gonna get into

51:24

a bunch of really dumb, annoying physics

51:28

that make it so

51:29

that the forces it's feeling

51:31

are very

51:31

different.

51:32

Yeah, absolutely.

51:33

- It is.

51:34

- I think it would be doable for sure.

51:35

- I remember making some programs

51:37

with Windows screen recorder

51:39

where it records your mouse clicks

51:41

and it's like, but if you move the mouse,

51:42

well, I don't know.

51:44

You could have some points on your lawn, right?

51:46

That it just always course corrects to.

51:48

- Oh yeah.

51:49

It's doable.

51:49

I think it's totally doable, but you know.

51:52

- Well, dear listener, as you are sitting on the couch,

51:56

having us on in the background,

51:58

mowing your lawn and driving around your Roomba,

52:01

we hope you enjoyed yourself.

52:03

And thank you so much, David, for being here.

52:05

This was so fun.

52:05

- This was a blast.

52:06

I had a really nice time.

52:07

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52:10

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52:12

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52:15

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52:18

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52:19

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52:22

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52:25

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52:27

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52:30

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52:31

you know that one friend who is always coming into work

52:34

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52:36

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52:38

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52:40

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52:42

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52:43

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52:43

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52:44

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52:47

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52:48

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52:51

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52:53

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52:56

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