00:00
The EFTM podcast, Talkback Technology.
00:07
Got a question about tech?
00:08
Trev's here to help.
00:09
Not sure what to buy.
00:11
Australia's number one Talkback Technology podcast.
00:13
I spoke to you on the Tuesday.
00:14
Thursday afternoon, there's this lovely courier man of me back door with a parcel for
00:16
Just to thank you so much because whatever your involvement, you truly got some magical
00:27
powers and don't ever lose it again.
00:56
Great to have you company, thank you for listening.
01:15
Another episode of the EFTM podcast.
01:16
The final episode for 2025, Merry Christmas everyone.
01:21
Thank you so much for listening and it's been an absolute pleasure doing the show
01:25
I've never done it without the help of producer Rob who has just lined it all up and made it
01:29
all happen and made my life a little bit more streamlined on a Tuesday when I sit down to
01:34
take your calls and it means a lot and I appreciate it.
01:37
So Merry Christmas to producer Rob and his family and to everyone listening and your
01:42
I hope you have a great Christmas.
01:43
I hope you get a little bit of personal time and a bit of family time and can balance
01:47
it all out ahead of the new year.
01:50
Of course the new year for us means CES, so Jackson and I leave on December 31 and we'll
01:55
meet Stig in LA and we'll head off to CES for what, just on the face of it looks like it's
02:03
That's all I'll say.
02:04
I can't say anything else but there's some pretty big brands that you've never heard
02:09
of before coming to CES and it's going to be cool.
02:13
So we'll have that covered on the Today Show, on EFTM and of course on Tubo's
02:18
Talking Tech throughout January.
02:22
The EFTM podcast will be back on the 13th of January to talk about the new year and
02:27
keep taking your calls and then we'll push on taking your calls throughout the year of
02:31
course here on the EFTM podcast.
02:33
Today we're going to talk to Boost Mobile's CEO Bobby Gildens and he's been in charge.
02:39
He's had the feet under the desk for about a year now.
02:41
It's been about a year since Telstra bought Boost Mobile, wrote a big check to Peter
02:47
Adderton and Paul Keating for the Challenger brand that's been around for 25 years.
02:54
But how's it changed?
02:57
And is it still a good deal?
02:58
And are they going to stick around in supercars now that Peter Adderton's not around?
03:02
Big questions for the people of Boost Mobile.
03:04
So we'll talk to Bobby, the CEO, shortly, plus your calls and try and help you out
03:10
with any questions you've got any time.
03:13
And that's all that's all I've got for you.
03:16
I mean, I hope you have a great Chrissy.
03:18
So let's get cracking on the final episode of EFTM for 2025.
03:24
This is the EFTM podcast.
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Great to have your company get in touch any time.
03:32
I would love to hear from you.
03:32
Carolyn's on the line today.
03:33
Carolyn, how can I help you?
03:36
Oh, fine. Thank you.
03:36
I just have a 10 year old grandson who'd be living the day before Christmas
03:41
and we wanted to get him some new noise cancelling headphones.
03:45
Mainly to wear at the football because he loves to listen to the commentary
03:49
and but he's not keen on when it's really, really, really loud.
03:53
Right. So we thought we'd get him some headphones
03:55
and we just couldn't work out which were the best ones to get for him.
03:58
So is that the primary use for them at the footy noisy crowd
04:02
and listening to, you know, that's the main one.
04:06
Interesting, interesting.
04:08
Because often you said he's 10 now.
04:11
Yes, he'll be 11 on the 23rd.
04:13
I mean, is he when we say expecting, obviously, kids don't know what they're going to get.
04:17
But is he expecting a nice cool pair of headphones?
04:20
Do you think or does he want to like or does he just want a solution to that problem?
04:25
Well, he doesn't actually know.
04:27
It just might when he went with his father and his aunt
04:31
a couple of times, particularly when Colin would apply in the members.
04:34
It's very, very loud and and he loves to listen to the commentary.
04:39
He's very good on the statistics and things.
04:41
And we thought if we got him some headphones,
04:43
he could tune it into his watch or his father's or TV or phone or something
04:49
and listen to the commentary as well.
04:50
But it would cut out the absolute screaming.
04:53
Yes. So the reason I say all that is to say that noise cancelling
05:00
is is actually a really horrible label for these things.
05:03
Because I sometimes, you know, I'm talking to people and they put them on.
05:06
They go, I can still hear the people around me.
05:08
I'm like, yes, because it doesn't it doesn't make for silence.
05:12
It works amazing on a plane
05:14
because they're engineered to, you know, to cut out that white noise
05:19
that is, you know, the humming, whirring sound of a jet engine, right?
05:22
But, you know, if I'm wearing them right here, sitting now
05:24
and my kids are beside me, I'll definitely hear them talking.
05:27
And so I'll be honest, I've never used them in a loud
05:31
like concert or football style environment.
05:34
And I worry they don't cut much.
05:37
They definitely would cut something, right?
05:38
There's no doubt in my mind they will cut something out.
05:41
But I just worry about the expectation
05:43
that they will really work to dampen that noise.
05:47
So which was all I was thinking was like a bunnings.
05:50
Sounds ridiculous, but bunnings have earmuffs, right?
05:54
So I think so forget headphones in your mind for a minute and think earmuffs.
05:58
So earmuffs are designed to cut out as much noise as they can
06:01
through simply being over your ears, right?
06:03
So they've got a good cap around them to plug your plug your head.
06:07
And there are Bluetooth earmuffs.
06:10
So you can pair them with your with your phone, as you mentioned.
06:14
So they may be the best solution to
06:18
being able to put up with the crowd and also listen to the footy.
06:23
At the same time, I would love to know whether a pair of, you know,
06:29
JBL or Sony actual noise cancelling headphones
06:34
would cut out the noise that you're looking for.
06:37
So it's mainly to it's mainly to take the edge off.
06:40
It doesn't have to cut it out completely just to take the edge off it.
06:44
And, you know, you're going to buy something here
06:46
that you don't want to be a one off use like at the footy, right?
06:49
So a pair of headphones, if he enjoys music and things like that,
06:51
he'll get a good use out of them.
06:52
So I rather than tell you a brand to look at,
06:56
here's what I want you to look at or you and your kids and whoever are buying them.
07:00
There's with earphones that go over your head, you know,
07:04
the strap over your head and the big things on your ears.
07:06
There's two types. There's on ear and over ear.
07:10
And you can tell the difference because on ear ones, the pad, the little cushion
07:15
actually sits on your ear, it squashes your ear, right?
07:19
Whereas over ear, the hole in the middle of the pad is big enough
07:24
for your ear to fit in.
07:25
And so the pad goes all around your ear
07:30
and that creates a little bit of a seal, which will only of itself.
07:34
It'll dampen the noise.
07:35
And then when you turn on noise cancelling, it will it will do even more.
07:40
So I want to make sure that you get over ear.
07:45
All right, over ear, over ear and you're going to want to pick them up
07:49
and hold them at JB's or wherever you go to look at the little cup on the ear
07:54
and go, yeah, that's that's big enough to go over his ear.
07:57
See, when you start looking at I'm on the JB Hi-Fi website right now.
08:01
And it's really interesting.
08:02
There's a set of JBL, they're called 720 BTs.
08:06
OK, they're wireless over ear headphones.
08:11
And the next and then $99.
08:14
The next next pair along are on ear headphones.
08:18
OK, and if you look at both those, the the two different products
08:22
from JBL at around $100 at JB Hi-Fi, you'll see the difference.
08:26
The cup is smaller.
08:27
You can just see it in the photos.
08:28
It's a smaller thing, so it's going to be on his ear.
08:31
So those are that's the difference between on ear and over ear.
08:36
And then obviously what we could do is then you just spent.
08:39
I don't know what the budget is for the young man for an 11 year old.
08:42
This one something he's birthday is two days before Christmas.
08:46
So we just want something that's going to be good.
08:48
Then then the first pair that I see on
08:53
on on the JB Hi-Fi website.
08:55
I don't know if you've got a pen, but there's two two pairs I'd have you have you look at.
08:59
The first one are the Sony.
09:01
They're called W H as in W for white, H for Harry.
09:06
Then the dash C H 720.
09:10
So they are Wallace noise cancelling over ear tick, tick, tick.
09:16
Then there are the JBL tune 770.
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That's the brand Wallace JBL.
09:26
As you know, while it's adaptive noise cancelling over ear headphones,
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they're probably going to be a step better than the Sony's in my view,
09:35
just because they're adaptive noise cancelling.
09:38
So I think 150 bucks gets you what you want at JB Hi-Fi.
09:44
So what about the ones at Bunnings?
09:48
Well, they're going to be earmuffs.
09:49
You know, they're going to they're not going to be the sort of thing
09:51
he's going to want to wear.
09:54
They're not going to be the sort of thing
09:55
he's going to want his mates to see him wearing.
09:57
No, true. Fair enough.
09:59
No, we'll go for the other ones.
10:01
What's the little fella's name?
10:03
Well, he's hoping Henry gets a great joy from from whatever you end up buying him.
10:08
But have a look at those two models.
10:10
And I don't think you'll find him something great.
10:12
Thank you very much.
10:13
He loves his football.
10:14
So is he a pies for you?
10:16
And is he? Did you say?
10:17
Oh, no, no, he's a Melbourne supporter.
10:21
Yeah, he goes to the demons.
10:23
All right, yeah, well, my Colin would play Melbourne.
10:25
It's so very, very loud.
10:26
Get him a black pair and then get some maybe some some demons
10:30
colours to kind of stick on the side of him or something.
10:33
Excellent. Terrific.
10:34
All right. Good on you, Carolyn.
10:36
Great to hear from you.
10:38
My pleasure. Good stuff.
10:40
It's a tough one because it's not the easiest thing to do.
10:43
Not the easiest thing to shop for either.
10:46
But hopefully we find the little man something very, very cool
10:48
and he can enjoy the footy in a little bit more peace.
10:52
This is the EFTM podcast.
10:56
Great to have you company and we'd love to hear from you.
10:58
Oh, four, double seven, six, five, seven, six, five, seven.
11:00
Wayne's on the longer day, Wayne.
11:03
Morning, Trevor. How are you?
11:04
Mate, very well. What can I do for you?
11:07
Yeah, my dad is almost 90 years of age.
11:10
He lives independently.
11:12
Family is close by, but obviously can't be with him all the time.
11:14
So we're looking into getting him a monitor that can contact us
11:20
if he has a fall or something like that.
11:22
And there's a lot out there on the market
11:23
and we're just getting confused just looking at him.
11:27
Look, I think it's a really important thing to talk about
11:30
in terms of, I think, what expectations there are for the product.
11:34
So I'm always nervous to recommend these things
11:37
because obviously there are variables to everything.
11:40
So, for example, you know,
11:43
a device that doesn't have back to base monitoring
11:45
because obviously there's really dedicated medical alert alarms
11:50
that exist that can be worn around the neck,
11:53
you know, like a chain that can be pressed,
11:57
they can detect fall, they go back to base,
11:59
all those kind of things.
12:00
Then there's your consumer products,
12:02
like the Space Talk Seniors Watch or the Apple Watch
12:04
that have these features and functions.
12:08
And they're amazing.
12:09
And without question, they are saving lives.
12:12
But I just want to be very clear that, you know,
12:14
everything comes with a risk
12:16
that it's either not being worn at the time
12:18
or it's gone flat to, you know,
12:20
that's my biggest challenge with these things.
12:22
We're talking about getting an Apple Watch for my aunt
12:24
who's intellectually disabled.
12:25
And look, I think it'd be a great way to monitor her heart,
12:29
but I just want to make sure
12:30
someone's going to charge it for her every day
12:31
and make sure she's wearing it at the right time.
12:33
So things like that are critical.
12:35
Now, the good thing is you can set up an Apple Watch
12:41
for another person on your device.
12:43
So does the person we're talking about
12:45
have an iPhone or any smartphone?
12:47
No, Dad's a bit basic in what his phone preference is.
12:51
Has he bloody well got an old flip phone?
12:53
Is he entitled to that?
12:55
And what about you? What do you use?
12:57
So, yeah, I want an iPhone.
12:59
So you can buy an Apple Watch
13:00
and then when you go through the setup process,
13:02
it says, is this for you or a family member?
13:04
And then you go through this process.
13:05
There's basically family member
13:06
or student essentially approach to these things.
13:09
So what that allows you to do
13:10
is set up a connectivity to it.
13:14
You know, there's always a direct link to your phone.
13:17
You want to make sure some things are turned off
13:20
like phone calls and stuff like that,
13:21
but the alerts is what matters.
13:23
And the Watch's cellular connectivity
13:26
means that you're paying five bucks a month
13:29
for it to be connected to the internet,
13:30
but it's connected no matter where they are,
13:32
as long as they're in mobile range.
13:33
But if they have a phone, it will call triple zero
13:35
and it will alert the emergency contacts
13:40
That's what you want.
13:41
I mean, there are a bunch of products,
13:44
but I really don't think there's any better product
13:46
than the Apple Watch out there.
13:47
Good thing is you don't need the absolute,
13:50
you don't need an Apple Watch Ultra.
13:52
I think you'll find Apple Watch SE,
13:54
which has also been upgraded,
13:56
has pretty much all the features you might want
13:59
from an Apple Watch in that sense.
14:06
I'm just trying to think what the differences were
14:08
because they only just launched the SE third generation
14:12
and you compare that to the 11th generation
14:14
of your traditional Apple Watch.
14:17
The third gen SE is doing high and low rate,
14:21
heart rate notifications, irregular rhythm notifications.
14:25
It doesn't do blood oxygen levels.
14:28
It doesn't have the ECG app.
14:30
Now, I would say to you,
14:31
the likelihood of your dad doing an ECG on the Apple Watch
14:35
might be low, but if you were with him,
14:37
it is an amazing feature.
14:39
All you got to do is look at it,
14:41
you go to the feature and then you put your thumb
14:43
and index finger on the watch and it does it.
14:45
It's amazing, but apart from that,
14:47
it does fall detection, crash detection.
14:50
Yeah, just can't go as deep in the water.
14:52
There's very minimal compromises.
14:54
I think blood oxygen level and ECG
14:56
are the two compromises you make by getting an SE
15:00
instead of a series 11,
15:01
but the price difference is $400.
15:04
So the cellular version of the SE is $489.
15:10
So it would be a very, very good investment, I think.
15:16
OK, yeah, because it's only others had these subscription models
15:18
that were a bit scary that, yeah, so...
15:22
Well, you're essentially got to have a subscription here
15:23
because you've got to add it to your...
15:25
Which telco are you with?
15:27
So we are through Telstra.
15:29
So you'll have to add an eSIM to it.
15:31
So it's got that connectivity.
15:34
I don't need to give you alerts, though,
15:36
because it will call triple zero without a SIM plan.
15:38
So it will do those things without a SIM plan,
15:42
but you just won't be able to kind of remotely get access
15:44
to any data from it and things like that.
15:47
No, and that sounds the gown.
15:49
Yeah, it's a cracker, mate.
15:50
Well worth a look, and, you know,
15:52
if you've got an Apple store nearby,
15:53
go and talk to them about it
15:54
and they'll help you through,
15:55
and I think you'll find the Apple Watch
15:57
is a pretty great solution for that.
16:00
All right, Triv, appreciate your advice.
16:02
Mate, my pleasure. Have a great Chrissy.
16:05
You too. Take care.
16:06
Cheers, mate. Any time. No worries at all.
16:08
Look, I'll be honest, I haven't done that,
16:10
and I am desperate to set it up now for Anishelle
16:13
because what I don't know, I know that it will do the full
16:16
detection triple zero calls and all that stuff,
16:18
but what I don't know is how much information
16:22
I can get from it remotely when it's set up
16:24
on the eSIM plan versus it being in the same home
16:28
and room by Bluetooth.
16:29
Like, can we see the health data?
16:31
That's what I want to know.
16:33
So I haven't tested that stuff out,
16:35
so hopefully I get to test that in a little while.
16:53
Great heavy company, and I'd love you to get in touch
16:56
Go to eftm.com and click Ask Trev.
16:59
We can send us a text. Good day, Jen.
17:02
Good day, Trev. How are you going, mate?
17:04
Really, really good. What can I do for you?
17:09
Trev, I've got a really technical question for you.
17:13
All right, let's go.
17:15
Right, I'm currently looking at either a GoPro camera
17:20
or the Meta sunglasses cameras.
17:24
Wow, that's a very good kind of comparison question.
17:28
So the big question is, what are you hoping to film?
17:33
I'm hoping to film.
17:36
I'm going to Europe next year on holiday,
17:40
and I want to basically record my time back home
17:46
because I haven't been back home for 13 years
17:50
and want to make a lot of memories.
17:52
Do you use social media, Instagram, for example?
17:56
I use Instagram. I use Facebook.
18:00
So it's an interesting one,
18:02
and you've got a smartphone, obviously.
18:04
You've got a smartphone you carry around with you.
18:06
Yes, I've just bought an iPhone 17 Pro Max.
18:13
So I would argue in your traditional going home
18:16
to visit family and see the sights
18:18
that I haven't seen in a long time,
18:20
I would argue that your smartphone is going to take
18:22
the majority of the, shall we say, high quality memory.
18:26
So if the family is going to take a family photo,
18:29
someone's going to snap it with an iPhone.
18:31
If you're going to stand in front of Buckingham Palace,
18:33
you're going to take it with an iPhone.
18:35
If you're going to take a video of the candles being blown out
18:37
on someone's camera, you're going to take it with an iPhone.
18:39
Does a GoPro add to that? Not really.
18:41
What a GoPro does is allows you to maybe put it on a selfie stick
18:44
and hold it out from a distance
18:46
or put it on a helmet while you ride a lime bike
18:50
around London, you know, those kind of things, right?
18:54
The Meta glasses, unbelievable for capturing those moments
18:59
I was going to say my sister got married back in August.
19:05
She's actually a Meta employee
19:08
and one of her bosses actually streamed her wedding tours
19:13
here in Australia via the Meta sunglasses.
19:18
I went to America with my family in March or April this year.
19:22
Two weeks were away.
19:23
And I committed to essentially being off my phone
19:26
for as much as I could while I was over there.
19:28
I didn't say I wasn't going to use it,
19:29
but I just wanted to be in the moment a little bit more.
19:31
So I took my Meta Ray bands.
19:34
I linked them to my Instagram account
19:37
and I took a film camera.
19:39
And I took film photos for most of the trip
19:41
because I just wanted to snap the memory
19:43
and not worry about the memory.
19:45
The film photos were horrible.
19:47
Probably 20% of them were good photos of memory level.
19:51
But what I did, we went to Dodger Stadium
19:54
or we went to the Houston Space Center.
19:56
I looked up and I said, hey Meta,
19:59
take a photo and share it on Instagram.
20:01
And what you hear in your ear is a little
20:03
like a photo shutter.
20:04
And then you hear this share to Instagram
20:07
And instantly that photo is on your Instagram stories.
20:11
And it's such a great way of sharing the memories.
20:14
And your Instagram stories can be then archived.
20:17
You could make a little collection.
20:19
It's called on your profile of the trip home.
20:21
But you can also, you don't have to share them online.
20:24
You can just say, hey Meta, take a photo.
20:26
Hey Meta, take a video.
20:27
And you snap those memories.
20:29
My only advice is be careful when you're wearing a hat
20:31
because my hat was always kind of visible in the photo.
20:33
But it would tell me that.
20:34
It would say a block of view obscured by a hat.
20:40
And the ability to stand in front of something
20:42
and say, hey Meta, what am I looking at?
20:44
And it takes a photo and tells you what you're looking at
20:52
So the only thing I found was the sound was a bit
20:58
hit and miss on with the sunglasses when any audio.
21:04
As a listener on that live stream, for example?
21:07
Was while during the stream.
21:10
They're not made for that.
21:12
They're not made for that.
21:13
So I did a live stream when I got them and I like walked
21:16
from my office to my home and I did a live stream
21:18
so that I can understand how it worked and you hear
21:21
in your ears, you know, there's a new comment
21:23
from this person or whatever.
21:24
But my talking totally fine.
21:28
But someone a celebrant, you know, five rows away.
21:30
No, it's not made for that.
21:32
It's not made for that at all.
21:33
So it's not made to record the sound of, you know,
21:38
something at the other side of the room.
21:41
It's made to record what you're saying and your commentary
21:45
So sound, it'll capture the ambient sound of the area
21:48
like waves crashing and stuff like that.
21:50
But it's not going to be, you know, but also GoPro
21:52
is not going to do that brilliantly either.
21:54
It'll do it better than the Ray bands.
21:56
No doubt GoPro recording that ceremony would have
21:58
sounded better, but still not amazing without a
22:00
separate microphone attached.
22:02
I honestly think on measure, unless you want to tell me
22:07
that you are massively into skiing, snowboarding,
22:09
mountain biking, surfing, then the GoPro is amazing
22:13
for those things, but also so are the Ray bands.
22:16
And also here's the thing.
22:17
Remember, you don't have to have the Ray bands
22:19
on all the time as in turned on.
22:21
I wear them as my default sunglasses.
22:23
I can't remember the last time I turned them on
22:26
because I only turned them on when I want to
22:28
take a photo because if you have them on,
22:30
they'll last, you know, the whole day
22:32
unless you stream a lot of podcasts or music
22:35
or take a lot of photos and video.
22:37
That's when the battery starts degrading.
22:39
So I just leave them off.
22:40
And then when I think I want to take a photo,
22:42
I switch them on with my with my finger inside
22:44
the left arm, turn it on.
22:46
It takes 30 seconds.
22:48
It says battery 100%.
22:49
And then you go, hey, man, take a photo.
22:53
Would you say the first generation are
22:57
just as good as the second generation?
22:59
Or would you go for the second generation?
23:01
I would argue there's been three generations.
23:04
And well, yes, they don't talk.
23:07
They were originally called Ray band stories.
23:10
Was the first generation.
23:12
The meta Ray bands are the ones that I've got.
23:15
And the meta Ray bands, too,
23:17
which is the second generation you're referring to have,
23:19
I believe, slightly better battery life,
23:21
perhaps slightly improved video.
23:24
Look, you probably,
23:25
if you can afford to stump up for the second generation,
23:28
you are going to get a better product.
23:30
But if you find and feel like the budget
23:32
for the original meta Ray bands,
23:35
generation one, then get those.
23:37
Do not buy the Ray band stores,
23:39
the original original ones,
23:41
because they're probably not going to do
23:42
all the features of a modern pair.
23:46
I think you'll love them.
23:48
So you suggest that I go for the Ray bands
23:52
rather than a GoPro.
23:56
You've got a beautiful smartphone
23:57
that'll take the most amazing videos and photos
24:00
if you don't feel like the Ray bands are up to it.
24:04
And how do you go about, say,
24:06
transferring those images
24:10
or whatever to, say, an iMac?
24:16
Look, I haven't done it to a PC,
24:18
but you do it to your phone.
24:19
There's a meta AI app on your phone.
24:22
It instantly pairs with your glasses
24:24
and downloads everything into your photo library.
24:26
If your photo library is synced,
24:27
they'll appear on your Mac.
24:28
But otherwise, you can just email them
24:29
or airdrop them across.
24:34
Sounds simple enough.
24:38
So good luck and happy travels.
24:42
And thanks for doing this with me this morning.
24:47
Thanks for getting in touch.
24:53
what a great comparison.
24:54
Even just the thought of GoPro versus Ray bands.
24:57
But I think in every solution,
24:59
unless you're snowboarding and skiing
25:00
and cycling or whatever it might be,
25:02
yeah, I think the Ray bands
25:03
are going to win that argument every time.
25:05
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26:07
Well, I've been arguing in the comments again.
26:09
That's what I love doing.
26:11
I made a TikTok the other day
26:13
because I've started this series called
26:16
And just for simple things,
26:18
like how to port your mobile number,
26:20
how to change telcos.
26:21
And geez, it got some arguments
26:23
happening in the comments.
26:24
And you know, I love arguing in the comments,
26:26
so I've engaged pretty heavily.
26:28
But it got me thinking about the mobile networks
26:30
and where we're at this year
26:31
and one company that's had a bit of a change
26:33
in itself, but probably not
26:36
to the average user is Boost Mobile
26:40
But under the desk,
26:41
the feed's been under the desk
26:42
for a little while now as Bobby Geldens
26:43
who joins me on the line.
26:47
Great to be here. Thanks for having me.
26:48
Mate, I don't think we've spoken on this show.
26:50
So congratulations first and foremost
26:53
You kind of came through the Telstra ecosystem.
26:56
And then once they took ownership of Boost,
26:59
they tapped you on the shoulder
27:00
and said, this is your baby now.
27:05
Telstra acquired Boost about a year ago now.
27:08
And it was an exciting opportunity for me,
27:11
I did a couple of roles at Telstra
27:13
in sponsorship space in the media space,
27:15
a bit of corporate acquisition stuff
27:17
and devices that had to be rolling at Telstra.
27:19
And then this opportunity came up
27:21
and being part of a brand like Boost Mobile,
27:24
that's a great challenge
27:26
to the telco market.
27:27
It's so much fun to be involved with.
27:29
I was super excited about it.
27:30
It's been a great year.
27:31
It's had heaps of fun.
27:33
You take the footsteps,
27:35
not in the CEO sense,
27:37
but Peter Adderton was a very vocal co-founder
27:43
and still is vocal in his life
27:45
because he's running a business in America
27:47
and he's very opinion about supercars.
27:50
it's a different approach for a business
27:53
to go from having such a vocal,
27:55
kind of outlandish founder
27:57
as the mouthpiece of the business
27:59
to being under the corporate umbrella of Telstra.
28:02
Does that change the business
28:03
or has that changed the business
28:07
Well, yeah, I mean,
28:08
Boost is 25 years old this year, Trev.
28:11
We celebrated our 25-year anniversary
28:13
and Peter and Jason, I think,
28:15
did a great job in building the brand
28:16
and really challenging the market
28:18
and building plans that really
28:20
offered value to customers.
28:22
And yeah, it is a change.
28:24
A change in ownership is always a change,
28:26
but one of the things that,
28:28
when I came in and Telstra took over was,
28:30
you know, we bought the business
28:32
because it's a great brand,
28:33
a great customer base and it's growing.
28:35
And that's something we didn't want to change.
28:39
The brand, you know,
28:40
really resonates with younger audiences.
28:44
it's a big supporter of action sports
28:46
and motor sports in the country
28:47
and offers great value.
28:48
And that's not something we wanted to change.
28:50
We wanted to stay the true to the brand identity.
28:52
So it is about growing
28:53
and some things that change
28:54
will try and appeal to broader audiences
28:57
that maybe haven't heard of Boost before
28:59
or haven't considered it.
29:00
But the brand and what we stand for
29:02
and the value product offering that
29:04
provide to customers,
29:05
there's absolutely no intention to change that.
29:07
That's really important to us.
29:08
The arguments that I've been having
29:09
in the comments on TikTok,
29:10
which is a joy of my life,
29:12
is around telco selection.
29:14
And I was making the point in my video
29:16
that I think generally,
29:18
and I've said this to telcos for over a decade now,
29:21
I think generally people don't realise,
29:23
A, how easy it is to switch
29:25
and B, that you can keep your number
29:27
and C, that there is only three networks
29:30
Telstra, Opposite and TPG Vodafone.
29:32
And you can have value
29:35
and you can have choice even within one network.
29:38
So the argument, for example,
29:41
nah, nah, I got to live in the bush,
29:43
got to be with Telstra.
29:44
And I go, yeah, I know.
29:46
So you've got options.
29:47
And I say, you've got Woolworth,
29:48
you've got Al, you've got Boost.
29:49
And they go, nah, nah, it's not the same.
29:51
But it is with Boost, isn't it?
29:53
And that's the fundamental thing that people,
29:55
especially in the bush,
29:56
need to know about Boost.
29:59
Yeah, that is really important.
30:00
And that's one of the key parts of our proposition.
30:03
We are on the full Telstra retail network.
30:05
So you get the coverage,
30:06
the same coverage as you would
30:07
if you're a Telstra customer, you get on Boost.
30:10
And that's really important
30:11
because you're right, it's an important choice.
30:12
A lot of customers in regional areas
30:14
who travel a lot might want and need
30:17
that coverage and reliability
30:19
of the full Telstra network.
30:21
But maybe they want to be more valuable
30:23
and need a little more value in their plan.
30:24
And so Boost is a great option for them
30:27
and yeah, that's something that we'll get.
30:29
It's a crazy saving though.
30:31
And I think a lot of people who understand,
30:34
because you don't remember your audience
30:36
and I think you know this,
30:37
whether a Supercars fan or something else.
30:40
A lot of them don't know that Telstra owns it now
30:41
and nor should they, frankly.
30:43
Who owns a business doesn't matter.
30:46
But it's kind of weird to me
30:48
that Telstra owns a business
30:50
that's undercutting its own business.
30:52
But I think the example is Jetstar and Qantas, is it not?
30:56
Yeah, and that's right.
30:58
I mean, we are owned by Telstra,
31:00
but we are a separate operating entity.
31:02
We have our own team, do our own marketing,
31:04
do our own retail sales.
31:05
And it's important for Telstra
31:07
and important for us to provide that choice for customers.
31:10
I mean, we do have a bit more value in our plans.
31:14
And we don't offer a retail store network
31:19
around the country.
31:20
And we don't offer brand new iPhones
31:22
on contracts to sell.
31:23
But for those customers who want a lot more value,
31:26
they need some more data and they need the network.
31:28
We're a really great option for them.
31:30
It's important to provide a choice for those customers.
31:32
And you mentioned, Trevor,
31:34
customers being nervous around switching.
31:37
That's something we see as well.
31:39
50% of Australians haven't thought about
31:43
or considered switching their telco in three, four, five years.
31:46
It's something that people are really nervous about.
31:49
I'm nervous about losing my number.
31:51
I'm nervous about having to call up and deal
31:53
with my existing telco provider.
31:55
And as you know, it actually is really easy.
31:59
It's really easy process to switch
32:01
and point your number across
32:02
and consider taking up a service from someone like Bruce Mobile.
32:06
Is this why I'm not in marketing?
32:08
Because I just don't understand
32:09
why no one's telling that message on billboards.
32:12
You know, there's no telco doing it.
32:15
You know, everyone is looking at a brand.
32:17
And look, I understand there's a brand to build
32:20
and I understand, especially in the boost case,
32:22
probably more than any other telco brand,
32:24
you literally have a brand persona,
32:26
which is, you know, this youthful,
32:28
you know, what does it now work your ass off?
32:30
You know, there's a real clear, you know, a personality to it.
32:35
So I guess putting up a boost logo and going,
32:37
you know, you can keep your number
32:39
or it's easy to switch is a bit boring
32:41
and doesn't really entice people.
32:43
But it's still a story that needs to be told.
32:48
I think, I think there is,
32:50
there is more space for us to tell that story.
32:52
We certainly do try and message that to market.
32:56
And I think people do see it in MSU.
32:58
You go on website for a lot of providers,
33:00
you can see, hey, it's easy to switch, put your number.
33:03
I think there's some trepidation on nervousness
33:07
Am I going to lose my connectivity when I make that port?
33:10
Am I going to have to call up someone?
33:12
Am I going to have a loss of service?
33:14
And I think it's that nervousness,
33:16
not just the marketing message that we need to,
33:18
as an industry, do a better job in overcoming.
33:21
And so we're certainly trying to do that.
33:23
And the experience as you've experienced,
33:25
it's really seamless.
33:26
I mean, you go online, when you sign up,
33:28
she was to get a new physical SIM or an e-SIM
33:32
from someone like Boost Mobile.
33:34
When you go through that activation sign up,
33:36
you have the choice to get a new number
33:38
or use your existing number
33:40
and port it over if you're resisting provider.
33:42
You don't need to call them.
33:43
If you're with the Vodafone or Optus,
33:45
you don't need to call them and engage with them.
33:47
It takes a matter of hours, generally for the most part,
33:49
for your number to come across.
33:51
And you don't lose your service
33:53
when you click that button.
33:54
It stays on until your new SIM is ready in provision.
33:56
So you have no downtime in your connectivity.
33:58
So it is easy and seamless for the customers to do.
34:01
Where does the new Boost stand on things
34:04
that were often discussed under the old team,
34:08
which were home, broadband.
34:12
There was a push to become a bigger telco than just mobile.
34:16
Is that still on the radar
34:18
or is it more just about focusing on core?
34:21
I think right now we're focused on the core.
34:23
I mean, we're focused on growing our mobile business
34:26
right now and expanding our customer base.
34:29
There's more for us to do with the investments in technology,
34:32
particularly on digital and with e-SIM.
34:36
We're focused on making sure that experience
34:39
is as seamless as possible and growing our base.
34:42
I think in the future,
34:43
there might be opportunities to expand,
34:45
but right now we're focused on our core mobile business.
34:47
I'm going to pitch you something.
34:48
I pitched to a handset provider
34:51
probably a year and a half ago
34:53
and they were on board, but it's a telco thing, right?
34:57
And because you've got a direct link
34:59
into the beating heart of Australia's
35:01
biggest network and biggest telco.
35:03
And I think, and I'll tell you right now,
35:05
I think my pitch works for Boost better than anyone.
35:07
It's the weekend phone.
35:09
Boost Mobile is, you know,
35:11
you're in a suit by day, Monday to Friday,
35:14
and you're on a surfboard Saturday, Sunday.
35:16
You know, you can see that person on a billboard, right?
35:19
That's your Boost Mobile customer in some ways.
35:22
It's also the, you know, you might be
35:24
you need during the week and, you know,
35:26
mountain biking on the weekend for a youth audience.
35:29
And there was this great thing
35:31
over the years of simple phones,
35:33
dumb phones if you want to call them that.
35:35
The idea of them is brilliant.
35:37
It's like switch off from work, switch off from your week
35:39
and just put your SIM card in this phone
35:41
and you've got this weekend phone.
35:43
But the idea of taking a SIM card out,
35:45
putting it in, stupid, right?
35:47
But now we've got these amazing eSIMs.
35:51
And this is definitely physically possible in the world,
35:53
but I think it requires a large investment,
35:55
I'm sure, from the telcos.
35:57
And I'm not asking for comment.
35:59
I'm just throwing you an idea.
36:01
The Telstra network allows me to have an eSIM
36:05
By the way, do you have Apple Watch yet?
36:07
eSIM? You don't, do you?
36:09
We don't have eSIM on Apple Watch,
36:11
but it's a good question, Trevor,
36:13
on eSIM and can I have, you know,
36:15
the dumb phone where I can switch off a little bit
36:17
and have a different...
36:19
With eSIM you can have a couple of different numbers as well
36:21
on that same device
36:23
and your options to sort of switch off.
36:25
The Apple Watch is a great example.
36:27
I can have, if I've got an Apple Watch
36:29
and I'm paying Telstra five bucks a month
36:31
for my mobile phone.
36:33
On the weekend I could put my phone in a drawer
36:35
turned off and I can still receive phone calls
36:39
The fact that that exists, but I can't put it
36:41
in a, you know, little Nokia phone
36:43
or just a second phone
36:45
and still receive phone calls on an eSIM
36:47
is just insane to me because
36:49
it's this beautiful switch off.
36:51
It's a really great work-life balance tactic.
36:54
I think there's great benefit in that
36:56
concept, both in marketing
36:58
but also in actual, you know,
37:00
I guess, feelings for people
37:02
so that they're not feeling so tied to their mobile phones,
37:04
especially in a world where we're having
37:06
social media bands and all this kind of stuff.
37:08
So I feel like there's still great advances
37:10
that could be made in Telstra
37:12
or network technology in Australia.
37:14
And I feel like a brand like Boost
37:16
could lead that, obviously.
37:18
Yeah, I think that concept
37:20
of digital detox is certainly one
37:22
that's gaining momentum.
37:24
I think for younger people
37:28
with our offering and we appeal to
37:30
that idea that you can switch off
37:34
get away from your phone
37:36
and focus on friends and family.
37:38
One of the interesting use cases
37:42
the festival phone for young people.
37:44
So when I go to a festival,
37:46
I actually don't want to be on apps
37:48
communicating, getting calls
37:50
but I can still take photos.
37:52
I still need to be able to make a call
37:54
but I don't want to be out there
37:58
by everything else on my phone.
38:00
So definitely the use case for it.
38:02
I think for us, where we are
38:04
on devices is we offer an awesome
38:06
refurbished device program
38:08
which is great for the type of customer
38:12
A refurbished device, as you know,
38:14
is something that is a pre-owned phone
38:16
and it's a device that
38:18
someone else has had but it comes through
38:20
a warehouse facility in Sydney
38:22
that our partners should run.
38:24
And what they do is they basically
38:26
take that phone in, that's coming
38:28
via a trading program or something like that
38:30
and they refurbish it. So they polish it up,
38:32
they take it through a 72-point
38:36
and make sure everything is working properly,
38:38
take it through police, loss-installed databases
38:40
and then provide it to us
38:42
where we sell it to customers.
38:44
The benefit of that is we can sell devices
38:46
at a much, much cheaper price point.
38:48
So you know, rather than have your
38:50
$1,000 brand new iPhones in Samsung's,
38:52
great option for a parent
38:56
or for someone who wants that new phone
38:58
but doesn't have the budget or doesn't really want
39:00
that brand new one, a refurbished device
39:02
is a great option to have that extra phone as well.
39:04
Couple of quick things before I let you go.
39:06
12-month versus 28-day,
39:08
I can't remember ever recommending
39:10
someone on a pre-paid 28-day plan
39:12
other than, yeah, test the network out
39:14
but then sign up on 12-months because it's the most
39:16
unbelievable value you can ever get.
39:18
For example, you know, the deal
39:20
that you've got running through to mid-December
39:22
is, you know, $20.83 per month
39:24
if you're paying in advance, $250
39:26
and you get 290 gigabytes of data.
39:32
Are you able to give me a sense of
39:34
how popular 12-month is
39:36
versus 28-days in your business
39:38
in terms of renewals?
39:40
That same, our 12-month $300 pre-paid
39:42
same, which you're right, it's on sale now
39:44
for $250, so that's nearly
39:46
just over $20 a month
39:48
with heaps of data to be
39:50
on the full-toucher network. It's an awesome deal.
39:52
That is our most popular skew
39:58
critical plan for us and customers
40:00
love it because they have that certainty
40:02
for a whole year. They get heaps of data
40:04
and it's a great value price point, so it
40:06
is the most popular bit. There's also some
40:08
customers who like the control and flexibility
40:10
of the month-to-month plan
40:12
for longer 28 days. So that might suit them.
40:14
I'm going to make the point too, and this is a good one
40:16
for people to notice when you see deals.
40:20
ends on 22nd of December,
40:22
so it'll be about a week after this podcast
40:24
goes to air, but the deal
40:26
ends, but you can activate it
40:32
boost customer and you're
40:34
already on a 12-month and that ends in February,
40:36
you could buy it now and activate
40:38
it then, can't you?
40:40
Sure can, yep, you buy it
40:42
now and wait until your current plan
40:44
runs out or when you're ready to switch over
40:46
and then you can do it for the end of March. That's right.
40:48
Now the last thing is you mentioned
40:50
your target audience and the places
40:52
you campaigned through sports
40:54
and things. You mentioned motorsports.
40:56
I mean, Boost, Mobile, Volco 600,
40:58
obviously Peter has been passionate
41:00
about V8 Supercar teams in the past.
41:04
you'll be sticking with and around
41:06
supercars? Any plans to grow that
41:10
Growing motorsports and action sports
41:14
of the Boost Mobile brand.
41:16
And motorsport particularly, we have
41:18
great partnerships with supercars,
41:20
with dirt bike riding and supercross
41:22
and obviously with surfing
41:24
and skating as well across different
41:26
sports. We actually have an ambassador program
41:28
where we support a bunch of up-and-coming
41:30
action sports and motorsports
41:32
drivers and the Boost Mobile
41:34
Volco 500, as you mentioned,
41:36
is a big part of what we do.
41:38
In that event every year
41:40
I think it's the iconic party event
41:42
on the sporting calendar.
41:44
That's certainly our intention to remain
41:46
in the sport. It's important to Boost
41:48
and you'll see us in and around
41:50
Australian motorsport
41:52
for years to come. Well done.
41:54
It's been a cracking year.
41:56
You've proven yourself year one
41:58
but I'm pretty sure the powers
42:00
will want to see growth
42:02
in you too, mate. That's always the way.
42:04
You've got to do better. You've got to get bigger.
42:06
That's all you want, more growth
42:08
and more people choosing the Boost Mobile brand.
42:10
Good on you, mate. Great to chat.
42:12
Merry Christmas and we'll talk in the new year.
42:14
Thanks, Trev. Great to chat.
42:16
You're listening to the EFTM podcast.
42:24
You can text Trev now
42:26
thanks to Vodafone on
42:36
Send us a text. Send us a WhatsApp.
42:38
Whatever it might be. We'll get you on the show.
42:40
0477 657 657. Cade's on the line.
42:42
Hey, Cade. How are you?
42:44
Really good. What can I do for you?
42:48
I have renovated my house
42:52
my in-laws to have a room downstairs.
42:54
And while I was doing it,
42:56
I cabled everything for internet
43:02
Mother-in-law that has dementia.
43:04
So we've got a room downstairs
43:06
that they can come and go as they please
43:10
on the father-in-law.
43:12
So I now have 25 cable
43:22
and cameras are debatable at the moment
43:26
in terms of they're not with us
43:28
full-time and we're back on the bush.
43:30
So I kind of wired it up
43:34
move in full-time, I might need cameras
43:36
if she heads in a direction
43:38
and we get to that point, we know where to head.
43:42
the situation there
43:44
do you not think cameras
43:48
interesting idea or a good idea for just general home
43:52
Yeah, definitely. I have
43:54
actually some really cheap
43:58
that I used while I was renovating
44:00
and they're still up and around
44:02
the place but we don't rely
44:04
on them for security
44:08
I shouldn't probably admit this
44:10
but we very rarely lock the house as well.
44:12
I'm not going to lie, I'm the same.
44:14
Yeah, there's always
44:16
people around. We're fortunate we're back on to the bush.
44:20
nice little community there but there's always
44:22
someone out the back and around.
44:24
A lot of cameras at my place should be mad to come near
44:28
So yeah, just wondering
44:32
I work on a building so I'm a builder
44:34
and they use a particular
44:36
brand because they do the whole
44:38
lot and it all integrates together but
44:42
I'm still using an Orbi that you suggested
44:46
RGB20 or whatever it is
44:50
but just looking at upgrading at some point.
44:54
the cables are just hanging out of the wall so you need
44:56
to switch for them as well?
44:58
So I've got a data rack
45:00
they're all terminated in the rack.
45:02
So they are terminated.
45:04
Yeah, have an old school
45:06
switch in there, 24 port switch in there
45:08
that's currently running everything but obviously
45:14
if we went to cameras, I'd be looking at PoE cameras
45:16
and then the wireless access points
45:18
obviously will use PoE.
45:20
So just kind of wondering if I look
45:22
at a brand that does cameras switches
45:24
wireless access points so it's all under
45:26
one umbrella or mix and
45:28
match and no dramas.
45:30
I don't think you'll have a major problem mixing and matching.
45:32
I think you can look at them separately though.
45:36
the way you've terminated the cameras now
45:38
is all you need for
45:40
a network video system.
45:42
So there's really only one left on the market
45:44
and that's Swan. You need to end up making
45:46
them anymore but like I've got a Swan
45:50
system here in the office
45:52
which is stupidly excessive for
45:54
100 square metres of office space.
45:58
And so basically there's no
46:00
switch involved there. They're just plugged
46:02
in from the termination point.
46:04
They're just plugged into the
46:06
Swan box because it provides the PoE.
46:10
everything the camera needs. You just
46:12
plug the ethernet cord into the back of the
46:14
Swan box to the camera and it's working. So in your case
46:16
you put a little jumper from
46:20
to the patch point where the camera
46:22
goes and then from the patch point back
46:24
to the network video box.
46:28
Swan's your best bet for cameras
46:30
and then the good thing is
46:34
an Orbi system again.
46:38
and I'll be proven wrong. I'm sure you
46:40
Bikwiti or someone high end like
46:42
that have a PoE mesh
46:46
Is that who you've heard of?
46:48
Yeah, that's who they use at work.
46:50
By the time you get the switch
46:52
and the recorder and the cameras and the doorbell
46:54
and the wireless access points
46:56
they're not mucking around.
47:00
we'll put it this way.
47:04
network, not 24, four in my office
47:06
downstairs which is where our NBN comes
47:08
in and one of those ports goes all the way
47:10
upstairs into the linen closet at the top
47:12
and that's where I've put a Netgear Orbi
47:14
but there's also a power point there.
47:18
power, proper power
47:20
but then it can be plugged
47:26
And that's what you want to set up.
47:28
So the power of a modern
47:32
it's exactly the same as what you've got now
47:34
power point and a satellite.
47:36
But instead of them communicating
47:38
via their own single
47:40
wireless network to each other
47:44
you've given them the ability to
47:46
communicate back to the modem
47:52
that's all you do. Now, is it as easy to set up?
47:56
a couple of different tweaks but it's totally
47:58
doable. You won't have any issues
48:00
finding support for that online. So bottom
48:02
line what I'm saying is you can totally go
48:04
with a Netgear Orbi system that has
48:06
wired backhaul and you can totally
48:12
which uses your Ethernet cables
48:14
to run the camera feed.
48:16
There's no reason you need to invest in a whole
48:18
system. There's obvious advantages to
48:20
the Ubiquiti system because of it's one app
48:22
and one everything but
48:24
if I look at it this way and I go
48:26
your wireless is really touched
48:28
you normally only go to that
48:30
when there's an issue.
48:32
Whereas your cameras you go to
48:34
whenever you want to and it might be a
48:36
daily weekly thing. I don't know why they need
48:38
to be the same app.
48:42
So have some fun mate. Thank you very much for your advice.
48:44
I will. It's good planning mate
48:46
to wire the house even though
48:48
it's a wireless world. It is still
48:50
slightly better system in the long run.
48:52
I've got them everywhere.
48:56
Alright mate, well good luck with it.
48:58
Thank you very much for your time. See you at the live show.
49:00
Cheers buddy. I'll see you there. Can't wait.
49:04
See you buddy. Bye.
49:06
Kate is coming to TubeBlogs Talking Tech Live
49:08
which is next Wednesday night
49:10
in Sydney looking forward to that one.
49:12
So if you want to hear the shenanigans
49:14
of a live show well we'll see how it turns out.
49:16
We'll give it a much thought but it's going to be chaos.
49:20
This is the EFTM podcast.
49:24
Great to have you company.
49:26
We'd love to hear from you. 0447657657
49:28
Matt's on the line today Matt.
49:30
Hi Trevor, how are you going?
49:32
Yeah, really good. What can I do for you mate?
49:34
I've got an issue with my Telstra
49:40
it doesn't work with the
49:44
satellite technology that they advertise
49:48
Where are you going to test that
49:50
for starters? Obviously an area with
49:52
no Telstra coverage.
49:54
That's correct, yeah. Out of my
49:56
minor workout in the
50:00
and there's other people there with the iPhone 17s
50:06
and I've seen it right beside me. Heaps
50:08
of sky vision as they
50:12
they sort of go out in the pit you lose
50:16
and all the Samsung's do is come up with
50:18
sometimes emergency
50:20
only call but most times just no service
50:28
What plan are you on with Telstra?
50:30
You want an upfront plan as they call them?
50:32
Upfront, the one that
50:38
I've spoken to the abuzzman who then
50:40
told someone from Telstra
50:42
and she was great. She called
50:44
promptly and got me in touch
50:46
with a senior technician
50:48
who I've been in talks with
50:50
trying different things like resetting
50:52
this, resetting that. He's been
50:54
right through like my phone
51:00
said, yeah, look it should be working
51:02
so the last I spoke to him
51:04
which was a few days ago he said
51:06
within five days another
51:08
team of techs that looked
51:10
at the location would be back
51:12
and have an answer for me within five
51:14
business days so that
51:16
they've got a couple more days to go on
51:18
that. Yeah, I've tried it.
51:20
He sent an email through
51:22
with step-by-step instructions on what to do
51:24
I mean it's pretty basic stuff but I've
51:26
done it multiple times turning the phone off
51:28
for 30 minutes whatever.
51:30
To be clear, people in the same area
51:32
with iPhones are having success.
51:34
Yeah, I've seen I've actually taken
51:36
a picture of his phone and within
51:38
a couple of seconds it pops up. Apparently
51:40
Telstra actually has a different
51:44
arrangement with SpaceX
51:48
but that's not something they advertise
51:50
and what that is I don't know but it's definitely
51:54
hang on, so on the iPhone
51:56
does it say Telstra SpaceX
51:58
or is it just the little satellite icon come up?
52:00
No, it'll scroll through
52:02
on the left hand side of the phone saying
52:06
and on the right hand side it just has
52:08
big bold letters sat in yellow
52:10
and a pretty old school looking
52:12
bar indicating how much signal you've got
52:14
and it's normally four or five bars.
52:16
Yeah right, okay so I was just checking
52:18
it wasn't the actual Apple satellite
52:20
emergency system that it was connecting to
52:22
and not the SpaceX one, that's all
52:24
because that's a big difference
52:26
obviously Apple has that
52:28
and do you know anyone else with Samsung phones
52:30
at the mine site? Have they seen the same thing?
52:32
Oh hey see it's probably
52:34
a 5059 site with those
52:36
two phones and yeah
52:38
no one with Samsung unfortunately has it working
52:40
so they're all sort of seeing
52:42
what happens with my case
52:46
a couple options would be
52:48
to go back to the iPhone 17
52:50
which I don't want to do, I love
52:54
and yeah I just want them to fix it
52:56
because they're advertising that that's
52:58
what it does and I would have looked at
53:00
you doing the paid version
53:02
of it where you can have full mobile data
53:04
and calls and what not.
53:06
Mate that is going to be some
53:10
I'll tell you why though and I've worked it out
53:12
it's not actually to do with the capability
53:14
because it's possible that they
53:16
could enable certainly calls
53:18
and then data, very low rate
53:20
data but it's you know what it's going to be about
53:24
because as soon as they say that
53:28
are possible everywhere they need to be sure
53:30
that triple zero is possible everywhere
53:32
they need to understand that triple zero
53:34
is going to work on satellite. Mate it's a can
53:36
of worms for them and if you imagine how much
53:38
pressure they're all under right now
53:40
from the media and the government around triple zero
53:42
they do not want that rubbish
53:44
on their agenda like
53:46
yeah they're just freaking out about it
53:48
so I think that's probably
53:52
problematic issue for them right now
53:54
but anyway that's said
53:56
you've got a valid concern and
53:58
the reason I want to talk to you is just to validate
54:00
that it wasn't just you essentially
54:02
that we'd kind of gone through the basic obvious
54:04
tests and I think that
54:08
reach out to both Samsung and
54:10
Telstra and get a sense of it
54:14
producer Rob to see whether or not we've got
54:16
an easy copy of your original note to me and if so
54:18
I can forward that on otherwise we'll be
54:20
in touch just to get you to document it but
54:22
I'll talk to Telstra and Samsung and see
54:24
if they've got any comment mate but fascinating one
54:26
because it obviously they've promoted
54:28
Samsung as being a platform that it works on
54:30
so they've obviously got some work to do
54:34
the only thing I could find online
54:36
is that if it's not a Telstra bought
54:38
Samsung yes you can have some issues
54:40
there but there's definitely a lot
54:42
of issues and when you look at other sort of
54:44
media platforms to you know there's
54:46
people out walking the bush going great
54:48
phone it's not working in the
54:52
yeah it's definitely not happening with
54:54
Samsung's unfortunately because like I
54:56
said I love the phone and I don't want to go
54:58
back because that's what I'm used to
55:00
now and I love the features of the
55:02
Altar 25 so hopefully
55:06
tested it with my daughter's phone I bought
55:08
her the same phone at the same time
55:10
and once you finally allowed me
55:12
to take it for a weekend which
55:16
I could wait to give it back because I don't
55:20
you know icons and stuff
55:22
yeah it didn't work either obviously
55:26
alright we'll leave it with me let's see what we can find out
55:28
no worries thanks Trevor
55:30
no worries at all mate we'll come back
55:32
to you thanks very much yeah it's a fascinating
55:34
one so it sounds like it's a problem for
55:36
our Samsung phones generally on this
55:40
SMS service that Telstra have launched and
55:42
clearly announced so let's see whether they
55:44
know about the problem and what's being
55:48
the EFTM podcast thanks to
55:50
swan home security to connect
55:56
thank you to swan for their support of the podcast this year
55:58
I appreciate it and it means
56:00
we can make the show free not that I could ever work out
56:02
a way of charging for it but hey
56:04
it does make it better to sit here and produce
56:06
the show so I appreciate their support to Alex
56:08
and the team at swan
56:10
big things coming in 2026 no
56:12
doubt let's go back to calls can I grant
56:16
what can I do for you buddy
56:18
I'm moving back into our house
56:20
I want to get better Wi-Fi
56:24
I'm a bit torn because you're
56:26
responsible neck year
56:28
we got Aussie broadband
56:30
and they've got the Aero
56:32
yes the Amazon Aero yep
56:34
yeah so I just want to
56:36
know are they compatible
56:38
comparable you know the neck gear
56:40
and that or should I go
56:42
for the neck gear well my
56:44
heart is saying please buy a neck gear but
56:46
my head says mate of course
56:48
there's a big reason
56:50
to go with what the internet provider
56:52
supplies and that is support
56:54
they're always going to provide you with just that little
56:56
bit better support when they know the product
56:58
they gave you so that's a definite reason
57:02
is excellent I've absolutely nothing
57:04
bad to say about them they're probably selling
57:06
you the latest ones which are you know Wi-Fi 6
57:08
maybe even Wi-Fi 7 I don't know what
57:10
they're offering but the big
57:12
differences are things like
57:14
the neck gear have parental
57:16
controls they have a security system built
57:18
in some of the neck gear products
57:20
have tri-band networks because it allows
57:22
them to have a unique backhaul for the
57:24
individual devices I can't
57:26
speak to that on the Amazons but it's
57:28
a thing to investigate if you wanted to do
57:30
some comparisons but at its basic
57:32
level my man they're a good
57:34
product we've reviewed them on EFTM
57:36
they're excellent the Amazon
57:38
make good products and I don't think
57:40
you'll be disappointed with them at all
57:42
right yeah yeah that's good yeah
57:44
because you know I just want it to the
57:46
three-story house but it's not a huge house
57:48
so we had that Wi-Fi
57:50
in the garage but you know
57:52
the top floor is not getting good Wi-Fi
57:54
so I just want to improve it because
57:56
so the NBN comes in on the bottom floor
58:00
you weren't able to run a cable up to
58:04
the cable we ran the cable when we built
58:06
the house but it might be
58:08
Cat5 and everything now
58:10
does with Wi-Fi and so
58:14
when did you how long ago did you run the cable
58:20
find out if it was Cat5 or Cat6
58:24
if it's Cat6 mate I would put
58:26
the router up on the top floor
58:28
I'd directly connect the NBN
58:30
box upstairs and because
58:32
weirdly Wi-Fi drops down
58:34
better than it goes up
58:36
so basically putting
58:40
upstairs is better than
58:42
putting them downstairs and hoping that it works upstairs
58:44
if you know what I mean but mate
58:46
you probably need a three-pack for a three-story
58:48
home just to put one on each level at the
58:52
I think you'll be fine with that mate
58:56
alright no worries thank you mate my
58:58
pleasure enjoy happy Wi-Fi
59:02
cheers good on you Grant thanks for getting in touch
59:04
yeah I mean look I'd love
59:06
you to always buy Netgear Orbi products
59:08
but I totally get that
59:10
there's plenty of others on the market and there's reasons
59:14
and so would Netgear
59:16
no problems at all but if you've got the time and money
59:18
and effort and we'd love you to support the people
59:20
that support this show and all the other shows that we're able to
59:24
in the two blokes feed and wherever else
59:26
so thank you for at least thinking about it Grant
59:34
thank you very much for listening
59:36
thank you for downloading
59:38
look we'll do it all again next year folks
59:40
nothing changing here
59:42
I have no plans to change anything
59:44
other than just get more efficient
59:46
we've got weekly giveaways
59:48
happening still throughout the Christmas
59:50
and New Year period thanks to the EFTM magazine
59:52
you can get all those through the EFTM app
59:56
that just makes it fun
59:58
and the entry numbers are just huge
00:00
and they're growing every week which is awesome
00:02
so thank you to everyone for their feedback on the magazines
00:04
and for entering the competitions
00:06
it's just free stuff for you folks
00:08
that's the way I want it to be
00:10
so we'll do more of those throughout
00:16
if there's a triple M station near you
00:18
you'll be able to hear me throughout 2026
00:20
we'll be doing weekly tech segments
00:22
I think it's a little recorded segment
00:24
that will appear in breakfast and afternoons
00:26
as well as a bunch of stations
00:28
I'll be talking to live every week
00:30
about the latest tech so lots happening on the triple M network
00:32
as well throughout 2026
00:36
look it's a big year bring it on
00:38
and of course we'll still be on the Today Show
00:40
and all those other things don't stress
00:42
Happy New Year folks
00:44
hope you have a great Christmas
00:46
and we'll talk to you again in a few weeks
00:48
on January 13th for the first episode of 2026