CALENDAR


我的Live!

有空的时候开开现场直播,哈哈,只要附近可以免费上网

2008年9月25日星期四

[LESMV]堀北真希×东京少年主题曲 - Love Song[彩虹左岸]

猫发给我的,感觉不错,贴上来了

特困生

也不知道咋就这么困,所谓婴儿般的睡眠...

灰常口耐的小动物们






















Google Android 手机视频





好想买啊,期待上市的时候不要太贵...

2008年9月24日星期三

自娱自乐

不只不觉中,已经辞职一个月了,休息也休息的差不多了,盖上好发条准备上路

这一个月,我一直都是一个人闷在屋子里,自娱自乐,不知道自己想要什么,不知道自己想干什么.对这冷冰冰的电脑,整个人也忽然失去了感情,以及一切辞职之前的豪壮的想法

曾经很有激情的找工作,也曾经很有激情的看书,曾经很有激情的删除校内账号闭关,也曾经很有激情的想过好好创一番事业,曾经很有激情的运动,同样很有激情的打理这个新诞生的blog.一个月了,突然发现,这些可以称得上曾经的,都是我的自娱自乐而已

这回是真的失落了,身边那些好朋友们都一个一个离开了厦门.我却还在这里.我不知道有什么理由可以让我留下来,同样也不知道有什么理由可以让我离开,这个城市让我深深的眷恋着

不舍的走,走的也不舍的,曾经说过要多认识人的,自己却先把自己关在内心的小屋里不愿出来

那天,一个好友在QQ上问我,为什么不回家?我说我对那里没激情,他又问我,难道对厦门就那么有激情?我沉默了,其实,不是有激情,而是有感情

我喜欢这个城市,喜欢这里,就象我喜欢自娱自乐的沉浸在自己的天地里一样;我有的时候也会对厦门充满着不满,抱怨这里糟糕的交通和该死的房价.就像我有的时候想冲出自己的牢笼一样,牢骚过后,便继续自娱自乐的生活

我的志愿,是做一个校长,每天,收齐了学生的学费之后,就去吃火锅.今天吃麻辣火锅,明天吃酸菜鱼火锅,后天吃猪骨头火锅,陈老师直夸我,麦兜,你终于找到生命的真谛了

片段 回忆 ---用Google Map承载的我的回忆 (一) 我的童年

    按照时间顺序,先从我的童年说起,我生在西北贺兰山内一个不算深的小镇,小镇周围散步着几个国有煤矿,我的家就在其中的一个煤矿,这些煤矿隶属于一个矿务局---石炭井矿务局,那个小镇就叫做石炭井,而我家所在的矿叫做三矿.
 
   我的祖籍不是宁夏,生在宁夏是因为上世纪六十年代,支援建设大西北,我的爷爷奶奶还有姥姥姥爷举家搬到了那里,那个时候爸爸妈妈都还小,然后就扎根大西北四十多年
 
    从开始记事情开始,我便住在奶奶家,我家和奶奶家离的很近,就隔了一条马路,爸妈工作忙就让奶奶带我.那个时候爷爷还没退休,我和奶奶每天都去矿上给爷爷送午饭.这是我3岁以前
 
    3岁多的时候,父母便将我送去了幼儿园,幼儿园的阿姨对我很好,我从小都不喜欢吃饭,当时的小胡阿姨就用勺子一口一口的喂我吃,(shy...真不好意思)在幼儿园那段日子倒没什么很确切的回忆...
 
    小的时候父亲做工程,很辛苦,要很久才能回一次家,我也不知道那一次是多久,反正就是好久好久,每一次回来都给我带好玩的东西,有的时候是一只小鸟,有的时候是一只刺猬然后教我认字画画.我很早就开始接触识字啊什么的.都是父亲教的,三岁的时候就已经认识了很多字,还学会了背唐诗和自己看童话故事,这使得我比当时同龄的孩子们突出很多,遗憾的是写字画画都太差了,后来小学的时候经常美术课不及格,这是后话.我喜欢一大早就钻进我父亲的被窝问他很多为什么,开始的时候他的眼睛都是闭着的,后来慢慢地被我问的越来越精神,回想那个时候自己真不懂事,呵呵.那个时候我觉得父亲真的很伟大,什么都懂.在他的影响下,我也迷上了看书,小时候家里各种书买了一大堆,爷爷家铺满灰尘的大书箱也被我翻过一遍了,去姥姥家(姥姥是教师)也是喜欢钻到书柜里找书看,经常他们叫我吃饭都找不到我.还没上小学的时候就开始翻看还在上中学的小姨的书,想想都觉得寒,那个时候他们的书有一些我都看懂了,比如生物和物理,还有语文
 
    再后来,我终于要上学啦,我的童年便开始告一段落



详细查看

片段 回忆 ---用Google Map承载的我的回忆(序)

无意识的发现Google map的这个作用,遂记录下一些可以记得起来的回忆,并希望用时间将这些回忆穿成串

打算利用这个建立一套同学录之类的,以避免毕业之后感情逐渐变淡,希望有人支持我

从昨天早上开始写,写了一点,只标了几个点,后续会慢慢加上,有可能的话,还会加上一些照片,无奈我留下的相片回忆很少很少,只能尽可能的多贴了

浏览方法:点击地图下边的"查看大图"

2008年9月22日星期一

Official Google Blog: The future of mobile

9/19/2008 03:18:00 PM
The Internet has had an enormous impact on people's lives around the world in the ten years since Google's founding. It has changed politics, entertainment, culture, business, health care, the environment and just about every other topic you can think of. Which got us to thinking, what's going to happen in the next ten years? How will this phenomenal technology evolve, how will we adapt, and (more importantly) how will it adapt to us? We asked ten of our top experts this very question, and during September (our 10th anniversary month) we are presenting their responses. As computer scientist Alan Kay has famously observed, the best way to predict the future is to invent it, so we will be doing our best to make good on our experts' words every day. - Karen Wickre and Alan Eagle, series editors

There are currently about 3.2 billion mobile subscribers in the world, and that number is expected to grow by at least a billion in the next few years. Today, mobile phones are more prevalent than cars (about 800 million registered vehicles in the world) and credit cards (only 1.4 billion of those). While it took 100 years for landline phones to spread to more than 80% of the countries in the world, their wireless descendants did it in 16. And fewer teens are wearing watches now because they use their phones to tell time instead (somewhere Chester Gould is wondering how he got it backwards). So it's safe to say that the mobile phone may be the most prolific consumer product ever invented.

However, have you ever considered just exactly how powerful these ubiquitous devices are? The phone that you have in your pocket, pack, or handbag is probably ten times more powerful than the PC you had on your desk only 8 or 9 years ago (assuming you even had a PC; most mobile users never have). It has a range of sensors that would do a martian lander proud: a clock, power sensor (how low is that battery?), thermometer (because batteries charge poorly at low temperatures), and light meter (to determine screen backlighting) on the more basic phones; a location sensor, accelerometer (detects vector and velocity of motion), and maybe even a compass on more advanced ones. And most importantly, it is by its very nature always connected.

Project out these trends another ten years. You will be carrying with you, 24x7 (a recent study of Chinese mobile customers showed that the majority of them sleep within a meter of their phones), a very powerful, always connected, sensor-rich device. And the cool thing is, so will everyone else. So what are you going to do with it that you aren't doing now? Here are some possibilities:

Smart alerts: Your phone will be smart about your situation and alert you when something needs your attention. This is already happening today -- eBay can text you when you've been outbid, and alert services (such as Google News) can deliver news, sports, or stock updates to you. In the future these applications will get smarter, patiently monitoring your personalized preferences (which will be stored in the network cloud) and delivering only the information you desire. One very useful scenario: your phone knows that you are heading downtown for dinner, and alerts you of transit conditions or the best places to park.

Augmented reality: Your phone uses its arsenal of sensors to understand your situation and provide you information that might be useful. For example, do you really want to know how much is that doggy in the window? Your phone, with its GPS and compass, knows what you are looking at, so it can tell you before you even ask. Plus, what breed it is and the best way to train him.

Crowd sourcing goes mainstream: Your phone is your omnipresent microphone to the world, a way to publish pictures, emails, texts, Twitters, and blog entries. When everyone else is doing the same, you have a world where people from every corner of the planet are covering their experiences in real-time. That massive amount of content gets archived, sorted, and re-deployed to other people in new and interesting ways. Ask the web for the most interesting sites in your vicinity, and your phone shows you reviews and pictures that people have uploaded of nearby attractions. Like what you see? It will send you directions on how to get there.

Sensors everywhere: Your phone knows a lot about the world around you. If you take that intelligence and combine it in the cloud with that of every other phone, we have an incredible snapshot of what is going on in the world right now. Weather updates can be based on not hundreds of sensors, but hundreds of millions. Traffic reports can be based not on helicopters and road sensors, but on the density, speed, and direction of the phones (and people) stuck in the traffic jams.

Tool for development: Your phone may be more than just a convenience, it may be your livelihood. Already, this is true for people in many parts of the world: in southern India, fishermen use text messaging to find the best markets for their daily catch, in South Africa, sugar farmers can receive text messages advising them on how much to irrigate their crops, and throughout sub-Saharan Africa entrepreneurs with mobile phones become phone operators, bringing communications to their villages. These innovations will only increase in the future, as mobile phones become the linchpin for greater economic development.

The future-proof device: Your phone will open up, as the Internet already has, so it will be easy for developers to create or improve applications and content. The ones that you care about get automatically installed on your phone. Let's say you have a piece of software on your phone to improve power management (and therefore battery life). Let's say a developer makes an improvement to the software. The update gets automatically installed on your phone, without you lifting a finger. Your phone actually gets better over time.

Safer software through trust and verification: Your phone will provide tools and information to empower you to decide what to download, what to see, and what to share. Trust is the most important currency in the always connected world, and your phone will help you stay in control of your information. You may choose to share nothing at all (the default mode), or just share certain things with certain people -- your circle of trusted friends and family. You'll make these decisions based on information you get from the service and software providers, and the collective ratings of the community as well. Your phone is like your trusted valet: it knows a lot about you, and won't disclose an iota of it without your OK.

Now, if we can just train it to do your laundry ...







Shayne Wang:这是我在google官方blog中摘抄的有关于移动通信的未来的文章,自从1973年世界上第一台移动电话在纽约街头拨出信号的那一刻,就意味着地球人们的生活方式要有一个天翻地覆的变化

.



如今手机已经走过了35年的历史,在经历过砖头一样的"大哥大",现在正在大行其道的二代通信技术"GSM",如今手机这个高科技的产物已经来到了第三代.它在从开始普及的时候只有打电话和发短信功能,甚至不是彩屏的也不是和弦的,到现在可以拍照片,播放音乐,上网甚至可以替代电脑做一些事情,这确实是在大大的改变我们的生活.甚至可以不用说话只需要用手指在键盘上按来按去代替日常的交流,手机着实已经变成了现代人身上不可替代的一部分(废话一大堆,感觉像在写论文...)


我似乎从手机进入到我的世界就开始与手机有着不同寻常的缘分,第一次接触手机就在几个小时内把手机的诸多功能摸透了,当然如果不是SIM卡被锁上,我可能还会了解的更多;我所拥有的手机也无一不是被我拆坏的;大学卖过手机,毕业后第一份工作也是设计手机...


当然,google也成为了我生活中不能缺少的一部分,除了使用搜索引擎我会优先使用百度,不过这也丝毫不影响我对他们的忠诚度,在使用了一系列的相关产品后,我还将考虑等Android手机在国内发行的时候买一部,啊哈,这才是我要说明的,明天也就是2008年9月23日,Android手机将首先在德国召开T-mobile的发布仪式,也就是说明天算作是Android手机的诞生日.与Iphone一样都是手机的划时代产品的Android虽然比Iphone完生了一年,但是强大的功能,低廉的价格,完善的软件系统,强有力的后背支援,以及注重中国移动3.5亿消费群体,这些足以成为打败Iphone的理由.

手机的明天,让我们拭目以待吧!

兰州羊肉串高手一次300串






Shayne Wang:不管最后好不好吃,看着就很过瘾...怀念铁钎羊肉串了...真想回家一次吃个够...

怀念小时候在老百货大楼楼下夜市吃羊肉串,那个时候的古老的卡啦OK,那个时候的罐装平吉堡酸牛奶(绝对不含三聚氰胺),还有烤鱼,还有端着花生腐竹等小菜穿梭于桌子间的大妈

还有夜晚的"江南馄饨",一碗馄饨加上香菜榨菜,撒一些白胡椒粉,端上来,即使再觉得不饿也能吃下去整整一大碗



路边的炒田螺,包子,等等等等,都是对那个无公害年代的纪念



现在,楼更高了,街道更漂亮了,那些值得怀念的东西却不存在了...

经历了几天的筹备,测试,我的新blog终于开张啦!!

    现在虽说开张,但是还有很多测试工作没完成,还有很多新功能没有去完善,有什么意见就提出来吧,比如上次润润说的有点窄,这个问题我也发现了,没办法,模板就这样,改了代码的框架但是改不了那个圆角的图片文件,有功夫了得去改一改了.

    blog放到这里的原因很多,主要就是因为blogger是属于google旗下的,google下边的很多产品我也在使用,觉得很方便,一个ID就可以体验所有功能,比如我的页面上的日历功能,通过更新我的日历,这里的也被更新,我可以把我的作息时间放到上边(当然这个是隐藏的),我也可以把我的一些日程安排放到上边,虽然现在很清闲没有什么实际的安排^^我同事也添加了诸多节假日的日历,有农历的,香港的,美国的,伊斯兰教的;还添加了NBA中湖人队(紫色),凯尔特人队(绿色),还有火箭队(红色)的比赛日程,这些都可以在我的日历中得到体现

    这个blog有一个功能叫做BlogThis!,很好用,可以把网页当作blog的文章发布出来,以超链接的方式,转载的时候就会方便很多.下午的时候想把这个功能集成到鼠标右键,可是失败了,还得多查一些资料才可以了;这个blog发表文章的时候也可以通过邮件,比如说在公司禁止了web访问的时候,可以以发邮件的形式发表文章;还有就是邮件功能,经过设置,每当blog有什么新文章或者留言的时候,blogger都会以最快的速度给我发送一封邮件提示,在blogger,blogbus和blogcn三个我拥有的blog里,blogger的评论发送邮件速度是最快的,加上google日历的无限短信邮件提醒功能,我可以很方便的进行blog和日程的安排管理

    这个blog也有不方便的地方,比如自带的功能不多,有些功能目前还没办法实现,比如说文章的摘要模式,不管你写多长,在首页上都是完整显示的,这要拖很久才能拖到下边;还有就是之前提到的,模板布局主体有点窄,放不下什么东西,也不能设定加密访问和隐藏,不过这些都不是什么主要功能,如果写了不想让人知道,那我就放到我的OneNote上了,呵呵

    以前在我手机还没坏的时候,手机被我刷到K810的软件,里边就有将图片发送到blogger的功能,那个时候blogger还是在国内被屏蔽的,当时我是通过代理申请了一个,也就是我写我的第一篇日志的那一天,后来能上也很慢,可能在国内服务器不够强大的原因吧,放了很久,一直都是用blogbus的服务,突然有一天在玩OFFICE的新功能的时候看到了里边OneNote的东西可以发送到博客,试了一下,看到了blogger,回想起来这个地方,重新登录试着用了一下,当时感觉就是速度很快了,而且模板很简洁,可能是欧美人的习惯,不喜欢太花哨的东西,于是我就开始喜欢了这里,有把blog放到这里的冲动.经过几天的试用,很多功能还都不太会用,操作比较复杂,但是我不太喜欢很简单的东西,有点神秘用起来才喜欢,而且这里的扩展性还不错,这也是造成这里看上去功能比较少的假象的原因

    这几天为了这个blog,我请教了很多人,也查阅了很多的网页,包括在blogbus的帮助页面,查阅有关于代码,各种服务提供商等等,也弄明白了很多东西,算是关于网站建设方面的皮毛知识吧

    对于这个blog,我会逐步完善的,如果有能力,我想把这里变成一个双语blog,当然,首要任务还是重新抓起英语材料学习,否则这永远都只是一个愿景了

    侧边栏中的朋友的blog部分都是在得到许可的情况下添加进去的,另一个名人的blog是从网上搜索找到的一些国内外的名人他们公开的blog,自然也没有得到他们的许可.这个栏目是会按照更新的顺序进行显示的,不是传统的"友情链接"

    增设了留言板和音乐播放器,这些都是外部网站提供的服务,欢迎大家在留言板中给我留言

    两个相册中的照片也都是随便放的,以后会逐步更新

    下边的订阅栏,欢迎大家订阅这里的内容并且经常过来看看

    新闻中订阅了一些个人比较感兴趣的话题,视频则是YouTube中随机当天点击最多的几个

    可能以上的表述还有很多不正确的地方,还请大家帮助指出来;有什么意见或者建议也请指出来以网站留言的形式或者用电子邮件的方式通知我,我的联系邮箱为wangsh8848@gmail.com