The WAN Show - PS4 slightly LESS underpowered, Amazon Drones are REAL! - Dec 4, 2015
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linustechtips.com Sponsors! Squarespace: squarespace.com offer code LINUS to save 10%. TunnelBear: tunnelbear.com - Browse privately and get your first 500MB for free! Soundcloud Link: TBD Timestamps courtesy of Sam Tilling (IPickle), Ghost, JJMC89 & Brandon Axtmann 00:04:13 Amazon Explains How its Drone Service (Prime Air) Will Work. 00:14:15 YouTube wants to compete with Netflix. 00:17:35 VTech admits to being hacked. 00:21:30 Playstation unlocks 7th core for developers. 00:39:20 Scott Wasson [Tech Report] joining AMD. 00:44:30 AMD drivers locking fan speeds to 20% and killing GPUs. (Patched) 00:47:50 Sponsor: Squarespace 00:54:15 Sponsor: Tunnelbear 00:58:00 TigerDirect to lay off 241 workers. 00:59:50 GTX960Ti (allegedly) coming soon for $249. 01:00:10 (Rumor) Fury X2 paper launch before 2016 - $1070 Launch Price. 01:00:40 Intel ‘Skylake’ CPUs are bending by some 3rd party coolers. 01:08:05 Your Printer Could Be (Helping) Spy on you. 01:11:25 DIY mac pro case. 01:13:55 Just cause 3 suffers from terrible frame rate and load times on the Nextgen consoles. 01:14:50 Konami won’t let Hideo Kojima accept an award for Metal Gear Solid V 01:15:17 Just Cause 3 is incompatible with multi-GPU solutions.
The WAN Show episode dated December 4, 2015 covers multiple tech topics with Linus and the gang exploring trends, rumors, and real-world implications. The hosts begin by venting about setup and capture card issues, noting how even small hardware changes can disrupt a full week of work when recording live streams. They then pivot to the main topics, starting with Amazon Prime Air drone service and what the footage demonstrates about delivery capabilities, range, and practical limitations for consumer use. The discussion emphasizes the novelty of a drone delivery concept that can reach customers within 30 minutes for lightweight items, while acknowledging regulatory and safety hurdles that will slow broad deployment. The conversation shifts to media competition between YouTube and Netflix, with speculation about original content ambitions and how premium streaming could shape YouTube’s subscription services. In parallel, they cover a security incident involving V Technology Education Company (VTEC) and a toy tablet privacy lapse that exposed data tied to minors, highlighting the broader risks of connected devices in children’s ecosystems. The show also dives into PlayStation 4 hardware, recalling Sony’s decision to unlock an additional processing core for developers and what that signifies about the console’s near-term performance trajectory relative to rivals. The AMD ecosystem and graphics driver behavior surface as recurring themes, including reports of fan speed locking that were subsequently patched, illustrating ongoing driver challenges in GPUs. The hosts then reflect on industry strategy, considering whether Sony and Microsoft have truly learned lessons from past marketing missteps and the implications for future console generations, while debating how much of the consumer experience should be driven by gimmicks versus core gaming capabilities. Throughout, there are light moments,dad jokes, playful banter, and spontaneous tangents about Star Wars and cinema,that keep the discussion lively while grounding it in substantive hardware and market analysis. The episode closes with a sense that consumer expectations for speed, reliability, and integrated services are rising, yet the path to delivering on these promises will require careful navigation of technical realities and regulatory frameworks. Overall, the WAN Show presents a snapshot of a rapidly evolving tech landscape where drones, streaming platforms, game consoles, and personal devices intersect with policy, security, and consumer sentiment.
Topics · technology · entertainment
Questions answered
- What is Prime Air and how does it claim to deliver packages in 30 minutes or less?
- Prime Air is Amazon's drone delivery concept that aims to deliver lightweight packages within 30 minutes by using unmanned aerial vehicles and sensor-guided navigation, but actual deployment faces regulatory, safety, and range challenges that limit immediate widespread use.
- Why did Sony unlock a seventh CPU core on the PlayStation 4, and what does it mean for gamers?
- Sony unlocked a seventh CPU core to allow developers more headroom for background tasks and potentially higher in-game performance, bringing the PS4 closer to its theoretical maximum and edging ahead of rivals in certain scenarios.