Here's our two of the Kim Commando show. You're going to love it. So schools across the country are banning cell phones and report out this past week that schools in New York City are having a major problem with this. Of course. The major problem is that in your classroom, you have different things like the ABCs, right? on the wall and maybe maybe like the science area whatever it may be and then there's always the clock right the clock as it turns out kids don't know how to tell time we never taught them because they have it on all their devices the microwaves the ovens it's everywhere digitally so we just never i don't know if i gotta be honest i know my son can but i don't know if my daughter can read a clock do you think you need to teach her how i mean it can't hurt i mean you know she goes to an airport or something. She'd be like, what's the big hand on, the little hand on? What does that mean? You think if she goes to an airport, there's going to be one big analog clock to figure out when her plane takes off? If she goes to Yemen or someplace like that. Nice call back to last hour. See that? Let me tell you, I was so hungry this morning. I almost ate o'clock. Did you? Yes. I did because it's so time consuming. And then I'd have to go back for seconds. and on that happy note welcome ladies and gentlemen it's called the kim commando show because after all i'm america's beloved digital goddess kim commando here with you once again and you just tapped into the best source for all things digital it's the biggest show it's the award-winning show it's just the awesomest show about all things digital and of course joining me is andrew babinski he's my co-host here and also the co-host on the morning show here in phoenix arizona on 99.9 fm and you can find us on over 425 top stations across the united states We're streaming in your favorite radio app. And also you can get the Chem Commando shows a podcast. We love you for that too, by going to your favorite podcast player and searching for Commando with a K. Let me ask you a question. Yes. You're walking in, you're sitting in a room. You want to know what time it is. There's an analog clock on the wall. You look up at it and you notice it's analog. Do you turn to your phone or do you actually read the analog clock? I read the analog clock. Okay. Is your watch analog? You know, it is. Oh, you have the digital analog. I do. but it does show a time face. Yeah, okay. All right, so you still live in that world. Yes. I definitely would look up, see an analog clock, and go, well, I'm not going to take the time to read that and just look right at my phone and say, oh, that's what time it is. See, but that just took more time because you can look at the analog clock and say, oh, it's 1245. It's not time. It's ease. I'm not worried about time. It's ease. I don't have to. You don't have to think. I don't even think about that. I look at the clock and go, it's 1245. I don't know. I'm for some reason with the analog clocks. I got to think about it. Maybe I'm just smarter than you. There's no doubt. All right. CES just wrapped up in Las Vegas. And that's where all the tech companies, they fly in. They show off their vision of the future, where startups with more funding than cents show up. So many demos. The booths are the size of small nations. So here are some things that got announced that you may be seeing in your future. And maybe you're sitting there saying, like, Kim, I really want that. Razer. Do you know about Razer, the gaming company? Uh-huh. They have now Project Ava. This is a five and a half inch hologram girlfriend or boyfriend that sits in a little glass chamber on your desk. How would you describe this to people who are just listening? It looks like a hourglass. Like think of an hourglass where sand is falling through the hourglass, but instead there's a little hologram person right there in the center. You pick your character. There's Kyra. She's a black haired girl who comes complete with thigh high socks. Sure. Zane is this beefy guy with snake tattoos. So you get to pick who you want. It watches you all the time. Great. Through cameras. And they say this way it can give you gaming tips and wardrobe advice. Yeah, that's what people are going to use it for. Gaming tips and wardrobe advice. Here, take a listen. Morning, Joey. You were snoring again. Definitely wear your favorite green jacket. Look, now we're really vibing. Have a good day. What do you think? Look, now we're really vibing. That doesn't sound inauthentic at all. Because I say that all the time. When Barry gets dressed, I look, now we're really vibing. Thanks, Kim. LG bought Cloyd, pronounced like Floyd, Cloyd. This one I would actually really like. Okay. Has two articulated arms and actual fingers. It's a robot that can actually fold your laundry. It can unload your dishwasher, make dinner, and tell you the weather. Now, the coolest part is that this little guy will learn how you live. It starts interacting with you. It knows how you like your coffee. But before you get too excited, it takes 30 seconds to fold a washcloth. 30 seconds? I mean, but I work on an eight-hour day. Yeah. I'm done with the laundry. By the time I get back, I won't do anything else. No price announced. Now, I have a question. Yes. Once he folds my shirt and puts it away, does he say, good, now we can be vibing because that's what I want from my technology. Now, what else can I do for you, sir? That's what I would like. What are we, five years away from robots in the house doing all of our work? I think probably less than that. I bet you three. All right. Roborock showed off the Soros Z70. This is a vacuum, robotic vacuum, that actually has like a little arm that goes out and picks up like socks and toys. That's cool. I think that's awesome. $2,000. Okay, not that cool. Let's see. Chamberlain's new MyQ Smart Lock uses facial detection, says to automatically lock your front door and close your garage when it spots a stranger approaching. I'm watching the demo right now. Yes. Some guy, doesn't look like a stranger, looks like a nice guy, walked up to the door, and it unlocked just based on his face. 280 bucks. I can't wait to see all my neighbors down, crouched down, staring at their door lock, trying to get in the house. Yes, exactly. Have you ever looked in the mirror and thought to yourself, I don't look good. No. I mean, I haven't. Never. I've never looked in the mirror and said, I don't look good. I look in the mirror and I go, boy, are you vibing. I look in the mirror and go, thank God you had good looking parents. the neurologic longevity mirror predicts your actual health trajectory that nobody wants to know this you stare at it for 30 seconds and then you get scores on your cardiovascular risk metabolic health heart health your real physiological age versus your calendar age and mental stress levels there was no part in the disney movie where she went mirror mirror on the wall who's the fairest of them all and the mirror's like i think you have eczema and you're gonna die in three years and nine hundred dollars for it to tell you when you're gonna die plus a hundred dollars a year subscription of course there's a subscription fee now the why things body scan too you step on the scale you grab the handle and in 90 seconds it tracks over 60 biomarkers heart efficiency cellular age art artery health early pre-diabetes signs no blood tests eight electrodes in the glass four in the handle six hundred dollars it's pending fda clearance and it should be here in the second quarter of the year you're gonna get that i don't know yes you will i know you know i'm already looking at like i mean i already got all these stats on my watch and you're overwhelmed by them no i look at it and i'm looking at my vo2 max and it's going up I mean, I'm like. That's what I'm saying. You're gonna get that. You're gonna say you shouldn't get it because you're going to go hyper on it, but you're gonna get it and you're gonna go hyper on it. Yeah, you're probably right. You and that scale. You're gonna be vibing. So Meta came out with something called the Neural Band. It a wrist band that reads tiny muscle movements in your wrist So what this means is that when you wearing your Ray meta glasses and you want to write something is that you can write messages on any surface with your finger, on a table, on your legs, whatever it may be. Because finger writing on your thigh, if you think about that, you just see somebody finger writing on their thigh. What you think like they're doing like spells or something. Who's that crazy person over there? They're just sending a Facebook message to a group. That's it. The AI bartender. Break Reels R1 will mix custom cocktails based on your mood. Tell it you're stressed and it will make you a special drink in about a minute. $1,200. Is it a robot? Does it have a face? Is it going to talk to me? No, it's just a machine. Just a machine? Oh, okay. Not by a minute. Is it wrong that when you said a new invention from our device from Meta and I immediately didn't want it because I don't trust them? Is that bad? It's no, because they're not a good outfit. I just don't trust anything they do. Anything they put out there, I think it's for them to try and suck my life force out of me. Which they do. Right. I won't get the glasses. I won't get this band. I'm not going to be writing on my back. Well, the glasses also do real-time translations on the screen now too. I won't have it. No. Here's one that I really love. Lego smart bricks. I saw this and I am baffled how this works. It's a regular two by four Lego brick packed with sensors, a speaker, LEDs, and a tiny chip. So kids can just build things normally. But now when you fly your spaceship around, it will make engine sounds that match the movements. If you build a car, it revs. Right. The bricks talk to each other. There's no app, no Wi-Fi. You just build and play. Launch is much. Here's the craziest thing. They take the brick and they put it on a car. and they start driving the car around and it's making car noises. Then they take the same brick, put it on a plane. It's there. They're playing with it. It's making plane noises. Then they put it on a duck and it makes duck noises. But then they lay the duck on its side and it starts making duck falling asleep noises. Like it's amazing. I am baffled how this thing works. Normally I can look at something. Oh, it probably does that. And maybe it does that. I have zero idea. I have no idea how this works either. I think I have one answer, and that's magic. That's the only thing I can come up with. They're wizards, and this is magic. Think about this. The next time you step on a Lego brick. Right. If it's one of these Lego bricks. It's just going to say, sorry, back to you. It's going to light up and do like a victory lap while you hop around. Or call 911. Why do those things hurt so much? I don't know. It's the sharp corners, I think. It's like, oh. Let's see, coming up, I have OpenAI's new smart device that's going to be coming out soon. There was a DoorDash scam. That's just crazy. We've got some unique ways to use your Apple Watch. And also the old oil trick scam is going viral on Craigslist. And of course, we have all of your fantastic phone calls. And you have me, Kim Commando. Hey, listen, if you're not already getting my five-star rated newsletter, what the heck are you waiting for? I mean, join almost a million folks who get my newsletters every single day by heading to getkim.com. Once again, that's getkim.com. And here's a little spoiler. I'm launching a new newsletter in just a little while. And if you sign up right now, you're going to be among the first to get the new newsletter. They're going to be rolling out probably within the next four weeks, in addition to the current. Not a new daily, just a weekly edition. And again, sign up right now over at getkim.com. Let's see. How about we do some phone calls, you think? Sherry in Gaithersburg. Is that how you pronounce that? How do you pronounce that, Andrew? I can't read it. I don't have my reading glasses on. You need readers now, too? No, but I still can't read it. There's a glare. Is it Gaithersburg? It's Gaithersburg. It's Gaithersburg. And where is that? Basically a county right above Washington, D.C. Oh, beautiful. Well, welcome aboard. What's going on? Well, I'm a high school teacher of English. So we do a lot of dealing with kids who want to use AI to generate their essay rather than turn in an assignment. that shows their own unique thoughts. We've come up with a, it's just a trick, a hack that helps, and that is to put in a Trojan horse in the prompt. Because we all know that, you know, to get an AI to generate an essay, you just need to put in the prompt. Correct. So when they cut and paste the prompt, most of the time they're not looking at the whole of the prompt. So if you type real tiny in white, something that is adjacent, but not directly in line with the assignment, and then you see that word pop up in the essay, then you know that they use AI. And that way you don't have to use six AI trackers and look at DraftPak or any of the other multiple ways. You can just start with that if you're writing about the Odyssey. Why in heaven's name did you talk about Deponia, the daughter of Poseidon and Demeter? What do they say? Do they ever come back to you and go, well, because it was my personal experience, No, they usually look at me like, I don't know. And then I just tell them, look, this is not part of the essay. So we're going to start over. And they do. But it's a useful hack for teachers to have. So this is tough because you want the kids to learn. And AI is part of their future. Yes. And so how do you get them to use AI like a calculator instead of as just a full-blown writer? Well, there are three things. Number one is we try to give them, like right now, they're creating a storyboard for speculative fiction, and we're allowing them to use AI to generate the images for their stories. But they have to write the descriptions of the characters in order to get that. So we're kind of having them do it through the back door. And then the other thing is that we always try to have them connected to their own personal lives. So as a result, they will be having to do more of the thinking of it. And the other thing that happens is a lot of times they will look up their essay online using AI, and then they'll hand copy it. But the bright side of that is their grammar has gotten much better. That's funny. That's funny. I do think the trend is starting to turn, though, because the 16-year-old, she will use AI, copy, paste, do my work. I want to get this done because I want to get in my car and go out and party all night. But the younger kids see AI as being a try hard and they don't want to go the extra limit. They rather be raw and organic or organic and real than use AI. So I think it's kind of turning with the next generation. I would hope so. You know, and so as a teacher, here's something that that I that I just want you to think about, especially because you're an English teacher. So you can give the assignment. Give me a sentence that includes the words defense, defeat, and detail. You know what the answer is? Defense, no, I don't. Defense, defeat, and detail. When a horse jumps over defense, defeat, go first, and then detail. I like that. Very, very nice. Thanks so much for calling in and giving some tips along the way. All great stuff right there. Hey, listen, so your Uber lift pulls up. You're about ready to get in. but I want you to start using the app's safety tools. When you hop in your Uber, tap the blue shield. This turns on audio recording and records the entire trip. And then don't miss this for Uber or Lyft. Turn on pin verification. This forces you to give the driver a four-digit code before the ride can even start. And if they don't enter the code or they enter the wrong code, the app won't let them begin the ride. Now, is the recording legal because this is all going through Uber and the driver has agreed to these terms? Yes. Okay, good. 100%. And I, you know, I had tried to take two Ubers the other day and both had the audio recording already on. Oh, okay. And I thought that was actually- I'm sure there's 99.9% of Uber drivers are legitimate and care as much about your safety as they do their own. I just wish there was an option. Cause you know, you can say like, you don't want somebody who talks, you want to go the fastest route whatever it is I would like somebody to say like air freshener or not Okay Because it too strong Oh my gosh I like I get in there I like whoa what is going on in here That's a lot of vanilla. That is. Warren in Shreveport, welcome aboard. Warren, how can we lend a hand today? Well, hi, Kim. Thanks for taking my call. I actually work with some students in university systems down here. and I set myself out a little goal, you know, New Year's resolution, imagine that. And much to my own surprise, I actually saw it through. Okay, good. Let me give you, you're in the digital world, so I've got some opportunities. I'm providing students from the, you're familiar with ISACA, Information Systems Audit and Control Association. Yeah. Okay, so I've kind of got some extracurricular, if you will. It doesn't matter the major they're in, but they're picking up some professional credentials along the way to enhance their resumes. And it's really working out pretty cool. I really like it. The students love it. But along the way, I guess give them a little distraction. I'm also a retired Air Force officer, flew B-52s, did some things, and I've got some life experience. So you're an underachiever, I can tell. Well, I don't know about that. Kidding. Anyway, I set out a goal back in the beginning of 2025 that I wanted to write a one-page kind of motivational, inspirational thing to keep the students going. And it's just based on, you know, things I've seen in life. And some of them line up in holidays, different things like that. But everything ties back to their journey as a student and preparing for, you know, taking care of me when I'm in a rocking chair somewhere, right? But so I literally have 52 of these little documents. You know, they're single one pagers. And I realize I've got to do some editing and packaging and what's the logical groupings of a few things. But I'm very much a neophyte when it comes to AI, unlike your previous caller. And I've actually had some over the shoulder work on some other stuff I was doing. I thought, you know, that's pretty cool. And I recall back to one of your shows sometime back where you talked, I think the individual was talking about going through insurance or real estate, something just trying to go through vast documents. Right, yeah. So anyway, the little small experience I've had was with CHAPGPT in particular. And I thought, you know, that can actually do what I want to do. But what is it that you want to do with these 52 sheets of paper? Well, I kind of want to see if I can compile it into basically a book format. Yeah, you can do that. Nothing else. Basically, I want to have it with my grandkids type thing. But I've got to do some, I guess, formatting, like say the groupings and different things like that. Oh, no, you don't have to do any of that. No, uh-uh. You don't need to do anything. Now, do you have these 52 individual Word docs, Google docs, or actually printed sheets? They're actually Word docs and PDF. I've done them both ways. Okay, so however you have them, Warren, is that go to Claude. And ChatGPT is, what's happening now with these AI bots, chat bots, is that one's good for like a couple of weeks. And then the other one speeds ahead. Then the other one speeds ahead. And so, so ChatGPT, I don't know what happened to it. It's that, that's the guy's asleep at the wheel. Okay. And then you've got Gemini. And Gemini was actually doing pretty good. And I was like, wow, this is amazing. But then I went to CLOT. And that's C-L-A-U-D-E dot AI. and that's from anthropic c-l-l-a-u-d uh-huh e.ai like claude from anthropic okay there's a lot of copycats out there so make sure you get the one from anthropic uh okay so when you fire up claude is that you're allowed to set up projects and on the left hand side there'll be an icon to set up a project so you set up a project you give it a name call it 52 inspirations whatever you want to call it then you describe the project every day and just like you told me every day i did this this and this and i want to create a book that's the description of the project and now it's time for you to work with that project so i you would upload your 52 sayings 52 documents whatever it is you upload it and you say i want to put these in categories i want you to fix any typos maybe make suggestions on how they could be better okay um and maybe with these 52 things maybe you actually because you'll have the room in a book is to say, give me, you know, give me three questions that after the person reads this, that they might want to reflect and meditate on. Okay. So we take it to the next level, or maybe there's a story that made you come up with this motivational saying, and then you could, you could write that story underneath that. Cause as you said, this for your grandkids, a legacy. So this way the story gets passed on and then Claude will come back with everything that just happened. And then you can say to Claude, for each one of these 52, write me a prompt that I can use to generate an image in Gemini or Mid Journey or Bing Image Creator. And then it'll give you the prompt that you just have to paste in in order for it to create the image. Right now, Gemini Nano Banana Pro, I know, that's so stupid, how they name these things, is probably the best image generator are out there mid journey gets a little esoteric uh bing is really good if you want a pixar style image uh but and bing is not very good if you want words in the image gemini is now warren i if i could say one thing if you're worried about all these steps and not being able to understand you use the word neophyte in our conversation just casually you're gonna be fine yes it's not that hard you can do this okay but the key is that you know the result is only as good as the prompt and what i like about with claude is you can describe you can create a project like i have various projects in claude right now one could be write trivia questions with me for the newsletter um one is write radio commercials i have another project for uh writing um steps for device advice whatever it may be. And so you can create all these different environments and give it a project. And so you're not sitting there having these running chats on all these different things that you may be doing and having to train it each individual time to be this expert in whatever that area is. Sure, sure. A question for you there with Claude, and I've heard a little bit from some other guys when I've talked to him about subscription services, because what I'm kind of interested in having it fenced somewhat, so it's not available to the whole entire world. Yeah, so it's $20 a month. Okay, so Claude's got subscription too then? Yes, yeah. They're all looking at, they're all settled in right now at $20 a month. And I am a sucker because I'm paying $20 a month for chat, I'm paying $20 a month for Gemini, and I'm paying $20 a month for Claude. Why don't you cancel them? The ones you're not in there with right now. I think if I didn't do what I do for a living, I would cancel them. Okay. But I'd like to go back to see if it's getting any better. Okay. Because that's what I do here as the digital goddess. I'm still enjoying Chad GPT. No issues. You still don't know how to tell time on a clock, but that's okay. Fair enough. All right, let's talk about your Apple Watch. Here are some tricks. Number one, you can turn your watch into a remote camera. So if you're taking a group photo, you can set your iPhone up across the room, open the camera app on your watch and then you can see a preview of snap the photo right from your wrist no longer running back and forth back and forth back and forth um your watch also monitors decibel levels around you so the noise hit levels too high can cause damage it'll tap your wrist to warn you uh i actually had this happening in the car you know how you turn on the music in the car oh yeah okay i wear my you know my earbuds and my phone constantly says turn because it's way too loud. Turn it down. Finally there a secret way to find your lost phone I mean everybody knows you can ping your iPhone from your watch to make it beep But here a trick that nobody else knows about except for you You can press and hold that button and then it will flash the iPhone's camera light so you can spot it in the dark, under the couch, wherever it's hiding. Now I'm just sitting here, I'm thinking about this. We have an iPhone, we have an iPad. Imagine if they called it the iWatch. All the time. I watch all the time. That would be bad PR. A little creepy. We have more of the show coming right up. Jeff in Indianapolis. Glad to have you with us. Hi there, Jeff. What's happening with you? Hello there. I am having an issue with Facebook on a business page that I have. Okay. Basically, I own a small firearms business in Indianapolis. It is based online, and I also do some local gun shows. I have a Facebook page that has, oh, about 5,000 followers, but currently nobody can see it because they have permanently suspended my page, basically for trying to sell restricted goods. Right. Yeah, firearms. Even, well, but according to Facebook's own rules, I as a company am allowed to do so. And there are plenty of other shops online that are doing it, but I seem to be the one that is currently taken down. Yeah. Once you get put in Facebook jail, it's pretty hard to get out. Yes. And there may have been a post that maybe you put up that violated their rules about firearms. like sometimes you can't facilitate transactions, you can't save for sale. Sometimes they say you can't list prices. You know, it's one of these things that's a moving target, so to speak, no pun intended, with Facebook. And so you can plead and you can try to get your Facebook page back, but it's pretty hard because they don't care. Correct. They don't seem to care whatsoever. Right. And so your question is, how do you get it back or maybe just start a new one? Well, I've started a new one and then it got taken down because it's all associated with my name. And I have I have been able to contact them both over the phone and on the chat sessions. I have sent them every copy of my business licenses, copy of my federal firearms license. I have even screenshotted their own rules that state brick-and-mortar and online retailers may promote firearms. They don't seem to care about their own rules, and they've still taken my page down. What's happened recently when I've been able to get somebody on the phone is they'll say, oh, okay, yes, and you've submitted all your documentation. That's great. Let me take it to the next step up, and someone will get a hold of you shortly. It'll go for about a day or two, and I'll get a message saying, we've reviewed your case and we're still keeping your page down. Okay. Well, let me tell you how some people get their pages back. Okay. They go to small claims court. They file. Small claims court. Okay. And they file a case against Facebook. And what that does is that gets the attention of their lawyers. Okay. And then the lawyers step in and then they will hopefully turn it around. I mean, these, these are, I mean, it's an extreme case, right? Sure. Sure. But if you're not getting any type of restitution by going through their channels and their help channels and everything like that, then there's really not anything else you can do. I mean, you would think a nice public company like Meta, and I say nice in air quotes, would have more responsibility as a corporate citizen, but they don't. I mean, could you imagine if we didn't have a phone number for United Airlines or General Motors? We would go bonkers, right? Absolutely, yes. But for some reason, we don't have a phone number for Google. We don't have a phone number for Meta, but we think that's okay. Are you serious? I just called Instagram this weekend. You did? No, I didn't. No, you can't. I mean, you can use, you know, in the interim, you can use dedicated platforms like Gunbroker and the other sites, right? Well, and I've got my own personal business web page. So I use that, and I've got an email campaign through MailChimp that I send out about 2,000 emails, 2,000 subscribers. So I'm still getting traction there. It's just I did get traction off of Facebook and made several sales, and it would be nice to still have that around. Oh, for sure, for sure. But there's unfortunately, like I said, they just don't care. I wish I had a better answer. I wish I had like a secret potion, a magic wand. I could go like, oh, Jeff, his Facebook page is back. All right. We have time for one more phone call. Thomas in St. Louis. Hi there, Thomas. Hi, Kim. Good to hear from you. My wife and I have our usual interesting talks about computers. And one day she was making a carrot cake and she couldn't find a recipe. And so she went online and she did a search for carrot cake and she found something she thought was OK. It turned out it wasn't very good. And, you know, when AI gives you all of these results, and maybe they even give you a website to look at, is there any way to tell if that site is giving you an AI result, which could be an amalgamation of 15 different carrot cakes all glommed into one? Now, was step one of the carrot cake recipe ground beef in a bowl? Well, that could be a clue. But you know, the biggest clue is that you don't have the real life stories. With food bloggers, they always say, this was the carrot cake that I grew up with from my great-great-grandmother from the Ukraine who used to farm her own carrots. And they go on and on. You're like, I just want the stupid recipe. But I read a couple of weeks ago, because of AI, all the food bloggers are giving up because they're not getting any more traction and it's not worth their time. Because it's totally overtaken by it. There is a website called gpt0.me, gpt0.me, and that's where you can paste in text and it'll tell you whether or not it might be AI-generated. In addition to that, you could also take quotes from that recipe and then see where else that appears. It could appear to somebody else. But carrot cake is not too hard to make. I'm sorry that it turned out really crappy. for you. It just wasn't the best that I've had. You know what? Tell your wife if she wants recipes, go to TikTok. Yeah, that's true. Go to TikTok. Because you know what? There are so many good recipes that are floating around on TikTok. Or you can ask Claude or ChatGPT. I don't... What I really love to do is you take a picture or you take a video of everything that's... You do a live call rather with ChatGPT or whatever your AI body is. I have all this in the refrigerator and it comes back and it says It's, you know, chicken meatloaf with mashed potatoes and carrot cake. Open DoorDash app. That's what I do. We have more of the show coming up. Here's a new one. You list your car. Someone messaged you saying they want to buy it from you're on Craigslist. You show up. The buyer shows up with an expert mechanic friend, wants to look at the engine. Everything seems legit. They pop the hood. Then the buyer asks you to check the trunk. While you're in the back, the mechanic buddy pours oil on the hot engine block. and suddenly there's smoke everywhere. They scream that your engine's shot, but they'll do you a favor and take it off your hands for half the price. Cash right now. This is a scam that's spreading. So you gotta be on your guard, folks. And speaking of, that's why you need my free newsletter. Every single day, I'll warn you about the latest scams, tell you the latest news, and you get great device advice. And also what the tech, what the tech is really like the fun part of technology every single day. And some bad dad jokes. Head over to getkim.com. That's getkim.com. That was the end of hour two. Don't worry. There's another hour coming up.