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[762.54 --> 767.68] i'm gonna post this into the twitch chat real quick what what did i just do what am i doing
[767.68 --> 776.00] i wasn't holding control i see there we go um but yeah it's it's people are kind of speculating that
[776.00 --> 784.30] this isn't really this wasn't really planned for oh that sucks am i using the right thing uh and
[784.30 --> 791.72] whether or not it was planned for it does seem quite reactionary uh maybe it was coming i suspect even if it
[791.72 --> 796.54] was coming it was going to be coming later than it did end up coming i kind of think the truth is
[796.54 --> 800.72] probably somewhere in the middle as we try to get our technical issues worked out here uh yeah
[800.72 --> 806.72] i want to keep going with that yes i will okay so uh but yeah what i was going to say was um you know
[806.72 --> 811.20] there's a question here in front of me does intel even have their own roadmap anymore or are they just
[811.20 --> 818.40] being reactionary towards what amd is doing it might be a little bit of both um because all of oh there
[818.40 --> 824.02] we go it's working now all of intel's difficulties trying to get a 10 nanometer chip to market have
[824.02 --> 830.14] been very very well documented right like oh when are they going to originally release 10 nanometer
[830.14 --> 836.50] like a year ago two years ago something like that yeah yeah so so they have to do something to keep
[836.50 --> 843.20] innovating quote unquote innovating in the meantime but um you know amd did they force intel's hand here
[843.20 --> 849.92] maybe a little bit um i do think it's really ironic that we're seeing so what it's um how many years
[849.92 --> 854.36] has it been since the fx series from amd came out like seven years or so quite a while something like
[854.36 --> 861.08] that so it's so it's so ironic now i think that intel is reacting and trying to compete with amd
[861.08 --> 868.32] just by strapping more cores onto a cpu because an eight core i7 is not something we've seen on the
[868.32 --> 874.98] mainstream consumer end you had originally or before you had to buy um an enthusiast platform
[874.98 --> 880.78] an enthusiast motherboard to do that so uh but eight core version apparently coming uh this fall um no
[880.78 --> 885.92] pricing information on that yet but um it's interesting because you know um obviously it is
[885.92 --> 890.06] going to be the most cores we've ever seen from intel on a consumer platform but it is consumer yeah but
[890.06 --> 895.30] it is kind of funny um you know seeing as the big knock on amd for a long time was oh they're selling
[895.30 --> 899.60] these six and eight core cpus but who cares they're not really giving anyone the benefit so
[899.60 --> 905.44] yeah um but the thing was especially back then with intel having so much of the market share
[905.44 --> 913.84] no one was able to develop for that reasonably so now having amd cpus matter a lot more uh to be
[913.84 --> 919.06] completely honest and having intel have to react to that and pump out a bunch of cores yeah meaning
[919.06 --> 922.88] there's a lot more cores across the field meaning it'll make a lot more sense for developers to push
[922.88 --> 926.12] for it which would be really cool because i don't know if you guys remember this but i used to make
[926.12 --> 932.92] cores for gaming videos and i would do like oh it's summer 2014 how many cores do you need to game with
[932.92 --> 938.58] and we stopped after i made like three or four of them because we were like well you could watch
[938.58 --> 943.94] any of these and get the answer because it was the same thing every single time so hopefully this
[943.94 --> 948.64] will actually mix that up definitely uh we can make another course for gaming video yeah you know
[948.64 --> 953.48] and obviously there's been development challenges just with how you know the stuff is actually
[953.48 --> 958.56] coded to spread the work cloud out load out among more cores but you know there might be more effort
[958.56 --> 962.74] put into that now that what you were saying there's just more cores out there where where you have
[962.74 --> 968.48] a chip with four cores eight threads or you know six and twelve is just a more mainstream choice now so
[968.48 --> 973.30] it's it's you always have to have one obviously the software or the hardware has to come first
[973.30 --> 978.50] usually it's easier for the industry if the hardware comes first i know with some certain
[978.50 --> 982.76] games that have come out and stuff it's been like oh wow hardware really isn't ready for this yet yeah
[982.76 --> 987.44] like nothing can run this yeah yeah exactly and then that's usually a fairly uncomfortable spot for
[987.44 --> 993.34] the industry to be in it's fun i enjoy that space but it's fairly uncomfortable for consumers to be
[993.34 --> 997.28] constantly needing to replace all their stuff to be able to do anything so having the hardware
[997.28 --> 1001.28] first is good so we're going to get eight core out there and get people used to it and have developers
[1001.28 --> 1008.86] start using it more often that would be pretty sweet and awesome absolutely it is it is a little
[1008.86 --> 1014.86] bit of a kick in the pants for people who recently i know someone specifically who like just bought a
[1014.86 --> 1020.38] new processor uh that being said this isn't coming until fall so it will be a little while uh but like
[1020.38 --> 1028.10] the 8086 i7 8086k like just came out yeah that was and it's pretty sweet but like that was like a nice
[1028.10 --> 1033.86] little stunt for however many weeks that was yeah chip to get but and then now it's like oh coming
[1033.86 --> 1039.60] this fall you've got an eight core version of an 8700k so it's like it's like what if you like spend a
[1039.60 --> 1046.42] ton of money you buy a house and the house has like trim where it's um where the cabinets are a certain
[1046.42 --> 1051.08] color or certain style that was that was in for like literally a month yeah then everyone thinks it's
[1051.08 --> 1057.22] ugly this is yeah so if you buy the expensive cpu it's a bit like that so oh man yeah i couldn't give
[1057.22 --> 1062.64] two craps about cabinets but i totally understand the reference um gotta get that resale value man
[1062.64 --> 1067.86] it's it's great when you walk into someone's house who's been like perfectly maintained done a really
[1067.86 --> 1072.38] good job of keeping their house up but they haven't changed a single thing in it since like the mid 90s
[1072.38 --> 1078.36] they have like lurid pink wallpaper with like a awesome yeah it's actually so cool i just it's it's like a
[1078.36 --> 1088.10] time capsule um okay and moving on to something that i know nothing about at all so good luck uh
[1088.10 --> 1095.66] at&t closes the time warner deal this sounds terrible to me i don't know i don't know anything
[1095.66 --> 1104.36] about it uh a federal judge ruled on tuesday that at&t's 85.4 billion dollar bid for time warner
[1104.36 --> 1110.50] was legal imposing no conditions on the merger all of this despite a lawsuit from the justice
[1110.50 --> 1114.84] department arguing that the deal would be anti-competitive and oh my goodness how is it not
[1114.84 --> 1120.18] i don't understand i can tell you a little bit about that please give me one quick second before
[1120.18 --> 1126.14] you do that sure i i kind of bait and switched you there we're gonna use uh the verge.com for our
[1126.14 --> 1132.08] source and thank you to sherman tanker for posting this on the forum you're good to go okay um so
[1132.08 --> 1140.04] so when i was in law school just a quick disclaimer i didn't learn a ton about antitrust if you watch
[1140.04 --> 1145.20] like if you watch tech wiki and the videos we've sort of done like law and tech a lot of it has to
[1145.20 --> 1149.36] do with intellectual property because i took a lot of intellectual property in law school so talking
[1149.36 --> 1152.62] about copyrights and like what you can do with content online and how you can share it and that
[1152.62 --> 1157.40] sort of thing um but here's why i can tell you about antitrust and just in case you don't even know
[1157.40 --> 1163.64] what antitrust is um antitrust law basically concerns companies that get too big the idea of
[1163.64 --> 1169.36] antitrust law is to prevent monopolies is to prevent one company dominating the marketplace for
[1169.36 --> 1174.94] a certain thing you know imagine if the only company out there making monitors was lg for example
[1174.94 --> 1180.96] that wouldn't be good you would have no choice in what you could buy so uh so with this um what's
[1180.96 --> 1185.86] happening is at&t which is obviously a huge telecommunications company they run you know back
[1185.86 --> 1190.62] in the day that are most known for running phone networks these days are a huge isp um they just
[1190.62 --> 1198.36] bought um time warner which includes um some really big like media properties uh hbo cnn um warner
[1198.36 --> 1204.18] brothers basically everything warner brothers does is owned by time warner so what this is called is
[1204.18 --> 1208.72] called um a vertical merger and the reason it's called a vertical merger is because you have one
[1208.72 --> 1215.26] company buying another company that does something different or more specifically one company provides
[1215.26 --> 1221.08] the other company with with supplies or it's a or supply chain right so um in this case time warner
[1221.08 --> 1227.04] is providing content they're providing like i said they're um they own hbo and cnn so they're providing
[1227.04 --> 1232.36] game of thrones or the sopranos or the wolf blitzer show or whatever people watch on cnn i don't know i
[1232.36 --> 1239.52] don't watch cnn anymore but um so and but you know at&t is the isp so um they're providing the content
[1239.52 --> 1245.68] that at&t can deliver down their pipes so that's what we mean by a vertical merger there's also a
[1245.68 --> 1249.88] horizontal merger which is a little bit simpler where one company buys another company that does
[1249.88 --> 1253.68] basically the same thing imagine if ups bought fedex for example right that would be a horizontal
[1253.68 --> 1259.96] merger but so when when the government so is that like a vertical merger would be like you you buy
[1259.96 --> 1265.26] functionality and a horizontal merger would almost be like you buy market share yeah that's that's not a
[1265.26 --> 1269.18] bad way to put roughly yeah you're buying functionality or buying supplies like to help
[1269.18 --> 1274.18] you somehow you know right so um like imagine if mcdonald's like have their own farms that would be
[1274.18 --> 1279.46] vertical integration you know tesla has purchased a few like manufacturing companies yeah and like
[1279.46 --> 1283.10] like companies that are into like tools and manufacturing and whatnot so that probably helps
[1283.10 --> 1289.50] them vertically i'm not sure exactly how to classify that because i think um i think it was also
[1289.50 --> 1296.58] manufacturing yeah yeah i'm not exactly sure but anyway so um so so specifically talking about this
[1296.58 --> 1303.86] um so the justice department of the u.s took um att to court afraid that this would make att too big
[1303.86 --> 1311.70] um there's like an antitrust concern here with just way too much market power but um legally it is um
[1311.70 --> 1315.64] and i was actually looking at the judge's decision which is like 200 pages long and full of legalese
[1315.64 --> 1321.92] obviously earlier but one key thing he mentioned was that in a horizontal merger courts usually have
[1321.92 --> 1325.80] a little bit easier time deciding you can just say oh you're buying another company that does
[1325.80 --> 1329.70] something similar so let's just look at how much market share you'll have now and if it's too much