November 25
Iphone 周五终于到手了 (图片见http://picasaweb.google.com/yangsite/IPhone. MSN spaces sucks!!!!)
用网上的傻瓜图文直播破解法,当晚就把iphone给破了
使用感想:
优点:
- 屏幕太强,秒杀我见过的任何其他手机屏幕。3.5寸,硕大无朋,亮度精度都没的说。
- 狂轻薄,treo 650比起来就是一块板砖
- 反应速度还行,虽然没有treo的零反应时间,但是毕竟是670Mhz的CPU,基本没有拖滞。
- 做工太他妈的精美了,makes any other phone looks like a cheapie.
- multitouch真的是革命性的突破,手指头在屏幕上拉来拉去,真是新奇的体验。指头一甩就换下一张图片。
- Steve Jobs说iPhone is the best iPod ever. 他没有说谎。CoverFlow配搭multitouch让以往的ipod看上去很原始。而且现在有了键盘,搜歌也方便多了
- 群众的力量是无穷的。iphone才刚出来这么短时间,破解软件已经多到琳琅满目了。虽然还没有发现能媲美treo上软件的数量和质量,但是相信有这么多狂热mac techie 和geeks的存在,假以时日一定有牛逼的软件问世。
- Google Maps,Safari,Youtube,eMail…With wifi,iphone
offers capabilities beyond imagination. Plus, everything just work so
smoothly. Isn't that how the ideal life is supposed to be?
- Gravity Sensor非常迷幻,能感应手机的角度而调整屏幕的orientation。看图片更是如虎添翼
缺点:
- 短信和手机铃声不能设置为mp3。虽然有办法破解这个,但是还是觉得apple太傻逼(抑或太精明)
- 屏幕打字还是不适应,没有实物键盘的触感,也没有treo qwerty keyboard的输入速度。而且男生手指头大,打字很容易出错。
- camera没有变焦,没有效果设置,虽然实拍效果不错,不过还是觉得不爽。看看人家N95。
- 不能copy and paste实在太不方便了。靠
- 电池很容易发热,尤其是看youtube 的时候,感觉像拿了个烤白薯。
- 耳机插孔的特殊设计导致别的耳机一概插不进去,apple太贱了,故意这样逼大家去买earphone adapter 好再赚一笔. Screw u Steve Jobs!
总结:
iPhone 的出现彻底改变了当前手机市场的格局,After all, when a smaller-than-treo650-and-thinner-than-MOTO V3 sized cute and sexy mobile device gives you:
iPod + phone + internet browsing
3.5 inch touchscreen
OS X
2 MegaPixel camera
Wi-Fi 802.11b/g
BlueTooth
EDGE
Quad-Band GSM
And most importantly, groundbreaking user experience
What more can you ask for?
November 19
想买Bose On-Ear很久了,新加坡居然卖到一直断货,害得我一直作案未遂,每天每晚心痒难搔。
今天上班效率奇高,六点半不到便在众teammate愕然下昂头离去,实属罕事,下班左右无事,索性转移斗争矛头去买了个BoseTriPort回来,$225大元,冲动是魔鬼。
triport戴着和on-ear各有各的舒适
音质上没有on-ear那么敲山震虎的让人麻到牙根的霸道彪悍凶猛澎湃的低音,而是非常全面。
由于是头戴耳机,音场特别好,我这个人辞藻比较贫乏,除了好,猛和牛逼外,基本没啥别的赞美词。
反正总体还是不错的,只不过体积太大,不能带着出街了
虽然现在还没煲开,但是听fatboyslim的kalifornia已经很暴烈的爽了,听钢琴曲也很剔透的爽,听女声也是清澈的爽,总之听啥都爽,而且以后声音煲开了还会越来越爽。。。想想人生真是美好啊,灰暗的生活有了新滴亮点。。
如果要是在国内,冬天的时候倒是取代了耳套的功能,更加爽上加爽,想起来都是欲仙欲死,说到这里,不由得要羡慕某位要回北京工作的帅哥啊,预祝此帅哥在天安门红旗下幸福滴生活,天天欲仙欲死。
November 15
新西兰老板和女人去柬埔寨度假了
菲律宾大叔家里死人回马尼拉奔丧了
印度小弟回pune和他妈过节去了
上海哥哥拿exam leave准备考试了
英国哥哥去campus recruitment面试applicant了
一个team剩下不到一半人,包括我
这些人统统地累哭了
November 04
Stop. I mean, don't stop reading this, but stop thinking what you're about to think. Or, O.K., I'll think it for you:
The thing is hard to type on. It's too slow. It's too big. It doesn't
have instant messaging. It's too expensive. (Or, no, wait, it's too
cheap!) It doesn't support my work e-mail. It's locked to AT&T.
Steve Jobs secretly hates puppies. And—all together now—we're sick of
hearing about it! Yes, there's been a lot of hype written about the
iPhone, and a lot of guff too. So much so that it seems weird to add
more, after Danny Fanboy and Bobby McBlogger have had their day. But
when that day is over, Apple's iPhone is still the best thing invented
this year. Why? Five reasons:
1. The iPhone is pretty
Most high-tech companies don't take
design seriously. They treat it as an afterthought. Window-dressing.
But one of Jobs' basic insights about technology is that good design is
actually as important as good technology. All the cool features in the
world won't do you any good unless you can figure out how to use said
features, and feel smart and attractive while doing it.
An example: look at what happens when you put the iPhone into
"airplane" mode (i.e., no cell service, WiFi, etc.). A tiny little
orange airplane zooms into the menu bar! Cute, you might say. But cute
little touches like that are part of what makes the iPhone usable in a
world of useless gadgets. It speaks your language. In the world of
technology, surface really is depth.
2. It's touchy-feely
apple didn't invent the touchscreen.
Apple didn't even reinvent it (Apple probably acquired its much hyped
multitouch technology when it snapped up a company called Fingerworks
in 2005). But Apple knew what to do with it. Apple's engineers used the
touchscreen to innovate past the graphical user interface (which Apple
helped pioneer with the Macintosh in the 1980s) to create a whole new
kind of interface, a tactile one that gives users the illusion of
actually physically manipulating data with their hands—flipping through
album covers, clicking links, stretching and shrinking photographs with
their fingers.
This is, as engineers say, nontrivial. It's part of a new way of
relating to computers. Look at the success of the Nintendo Wii. Look at
Microsoft's new Surface Computing division. Look at how Apple has
propagated its touchscreen interface to the iPod line with the iPod
Touch. Can it be long before we get an iMac Touch? A TouchBook?
Touching is the new seeing.
3. It will make other phones better
jobs didn't write the
code inside the iPhone. These days he doesn't dirty his fingers with
1's and 0's, if he ever really did. But he did negotiate the deal with
AT&T to carry the iPhone. That's important: one reason so many cell
phones are lame is that cell-phone-service providers hobble developers
with lame rules about what they can and can't do. AT&T gave Apple
unprecedented freedom to build the iPhone to its own specifications.
Now other phone makers are jealous. They're demanding the same
freedoms. That means better, more innovative phones for all.
4. It's not a phone, it's a platform
when apple made the
iphone, it didn't throw together some cheap-o bare-bones firmware. It
took OS X, its full-featured desktop operating system, and somehow
squished it down to fit inside the iPhone's elegant
glass-and-stainless-steel case. That makes the iPhone more than just a
gadget. It's a genuine handheld, walk-around computer, the first device
that really deserves the name. One of the big trends of 2007 was the
idea that computing doesn't belong just in cyberspace, it needs to
happen here, in the real world, where actual stuff happens. The iPhone
gets applications like Google Maps out onto the street, where we really
need them.
And this is just the beginning. Platforms are for building on. Last
month, after a lot of throat-clearing, Apple decided to open up the
iPhone, so that you—meaning people other than Apple employees—will be
able to develop software for it too. Ever notice all that black blank
space on the iPhone's desktop? It's about to fill up with lots of tiny,
pretty, useful icons.
5. It is but the ghost of iPhones yet to come
the iphone has
sold enough units—more than 1.4 million at press time—that it'll be
around for a while, and with all that room to develop and its
infinitely updatable, all-software interface, the iPhone is built to
evolve. Look at the iPod of six years ago. That monochrome interface!
That clunky touchwheel! It looks like something a caveman whittled from
a piece of flint using another piece of flint. Now imagine something
that's going to make the iPhone look that primitive. You'll have one in
a few years. It'll be very cool.
And it'll be even cheaper.
November 02
http://www.bigfools.com/quiz/blog.php
博客风格分析器
www.wordance.spaces.live.com的成分:
- 摇滚青年:32.76%
- 纯情派掌门人:24.67%
- 中了安妮宝贝的毒:18.31%
- 垃圾场:16.21%
- 陈凯歌级别的无耻:5.80%
- 如芙蓉姐姐彪悍地自恋:2.00%
- 自恋:0.21%