字幕列表 影片播放 由 AI 自動生成 列印所有字幕 列印翻譯字幕 列印英文字幕 Victoria Barranco: I really, really miss the headphone jack. Victoria Barranco:我真的非常非常想念耳機插孔。 Nich Carlson: I really, really like AirPods, Nich Carlson:我真的非常非常喜歡AirPods。 and so I'm OK with the headphone jack being gone. 所以我對耳機插孔的消失也沒有意見。 Jacqui Frank: Also I have a headphone jack now, Jacqui Frank:還有我有一個耳機插孔了。 so I'm really smug about it. 所以我真的很得意。 I switched from iPhone to Android. 我從iPhone換到了Android。 It wasn't the No. 1 reason that I decided to do that, 這不是我決定這麼做的首要原因。 but the headphone jack was important to me. 但耳機插孔對我很重要。 Barranco: Now I've got this stupid dongle 現在我已經得到了這個愚蠢的加密狗。 that I've lost literally three times 屢敗屢戰 in order to listen to my music, 為了聽我的音樂。 and I'm not buying into the whole AirPods things, I refuse. 我不買進整個AirPods的東西,我拒絕。 Frank: I mostly use Bluetooth headphones, 弗蘭克:我主要使用藍牙耳機。 so it's actually not a huge impact to me 所以對我來說其實影響不大 but still is an irritation. 但仍然是一種刺激。 If my headphones were dead and I also wanted 如果我的耳機沒電了,我也想。 to charge my phone, I could never do that, 為我的手機充電,我永遠也做不到。 and I don't like being in that situation. 我不喜歡在這種情況下。 Barranco: It's just the security of knowing, 巴蘭科:就是知道的安全感。 OK, if it did fall out of my ears, 好吧,如果真的從我耳朵裡掉出來。 it's not gonna, like, go rolling down the subway 它不會一樣,去滾下地鐵 or something. It's like, OK, still attached to my phone 或什麼的。這就像,好吧,仍然連接到我的手機。 if my headphones drop out. 如果我的耳機掉了, Carlson: Remember how you would, like, move your arm Carlson:記住你會如何,喜歡,移動你的手臂。 and just knock the earphones out of your ears? 就把耳機從耳朵裡敲出來? And then sometimes you'd get them caught on a door handle 有時候你會把它們夾在門把手上。 as you were walking into a room? 當你走進一個房間時? If we had to sacrifice the headphone jack 如果我們不得不犧牲耳機插孔。 to get AirPods, which I don't think is what we had to do, 以獲得AirPods,我認為這不是我們必須要做的。 but if that's what we had to do, then it was a great trade. 但如果這就是我們必須做的, 那麼這是一個偉大的交易。 Frank: I just don't understand why tech companies 弗蘭克:我只是不明白為什麼科技公司要 want us to choose. Like, just give us what we want. 要我們選擇。就像,只是給我們我們想要的東西。 We didn't ask for foldable screens, 我們並沒有要可摺疊的螢幕。 we asked for headphone jacks. It's so simple. 我們要求的耳機插孔。它是如此簡單。 Carlson: We got rid of the headphone jack 卡爾森:我們去掉了耳機插孔。 so that Apple could sell more iPhones and AirPods. 以便蘋果能賣出更多的iPhone和AirPods。 That is why it is gone. 所以它才會消失。 I know that a lot of people are very upset about it, 我知道很多人對此很不滿。 but I have AirPods. I'm good. 但我有AirPods。我很好。 Alex Appolonia: AOL Instant Messaging. 亞歷克斯-阿波洛尼亞AOL即時通訊 Danielle Cohen: AIM was an instant-messaging platform. 丹妮爾-科恩,AIM是一個即時通訊平臺。AIM是一個即時通訊平臺。 Frank: AIM is basically text messaging 弗蘭克。AIM基本上就是簡訊 before text messaging was a thing. 之前,簡訊是一個東西。 Appolonia: I remember the sound 阿波羅尼亞。我記得這個聲音 of getting a notification, though. 的得到通知,但。 That's, like, embedded in my head. 這是一樣,嵌入在我的頭上。 Wait, now, it's like, da-ding! Like, what was it like? 等一下,現在,這就像,da -ding!就像,那是什麼感覺? Da-da-ding. 噠噠丁。 Carlson: Oh, I remember SmarterChild. Carlson哦,我記得SmarterChild。 Alyse Kalish: Yes, SmarterChild. Alyse Kalish是的,SmarterChild。 It got, like, really scary. 它得到了一樣,真的很嚇人。 I feel like I would, like, try to flirt with him 我覺得我會,喜歡,嘗試與他調情。 and, like, see if he was interested. 並且,喜歡,看看他是否有興趣。 Cohen: I actually had maybe four AIM usernames. 科恩:其實我大概有四個AIM用戶名。 xxxprettyinpinkxx. xxxprettyinpinkxx。 Paige DiFiore: colesprouse4ever with the 4. That was me. Paige DiFiore:colesprouse4ever與4.那是我。 Appolonia: cheerdivaAl12. I wasn't a diva. Appolonia:cheerdivaAl12。我不是天后。 I don't know why that was part of my screen name. 我不知道為什麼這是我網名的一部分。 Frank: firesparx14. 弗蘭克:firesparx14。 Jennifer Ortakales: sweetchick130693. 詹妮弗-奧塔卡萊斯:sweetchick130693。 Carlson: And then I was also boltz999. 卡爾森。然後我也是boltz999。 William Antonelli: swordscape40, because that was the name 威廉-安東內利:swordscape40,因為那是個名字。 I used for RuneScape. 我用於RuneScape。 Shannon Murphy: joejonaslover1996, Shannon Murphy:joejonaslover1996。 and I would leave away messages, 而我也會留下資訊。 like, depending on who he was dating. 喜歡,取決於他是誰約會。 I'd be like, "I don't like you Taylor Swift," 我會說:"我不喜歡你泰勒-斯威夫特。" or like, "I don't like you Demi Lovato." 或者說 "我不喜歡你Demi Lovato" Something ridiculous, as if they would see 一些荒謬的事情,好像他們會看到 my AIM away message. 我的AIM離開消息。 Cohen: If a boy liked me, he would write 如果一個男孩喜歡我,他就會寫下 "Dani "Dani Frank: Insert whatever, like, emo song was popular 弗蘭克:插入任何,比如,emo歌曲是流行的。 when I was 12, and that was definitely part of it. 當我12歲的時候,這絕對是其中的一部分。 Carlson: People definitely expressed themselves 卡爾森。People definitely expressed themselves with their away messages. 與他們的客場資訊。 Cohen: At my school, it was really important 科恩在我的學校,這真的很重要 that you put in, like, all the names of your friends 你把一樣,你所有的朋友的名字 that are in a clique. 屬於小圈子的。 Michelle Yan: What was it, Buddy Lists? 顏雪兒。那是什麼,好友列表? It was, like, "best friends," "friends." 就像 "最好的朋友","朋友"。 Oh, yeah, I moved people off my best-friends list 哦,是的,我把人們從我最好的朋友名單上移走了。 to the friends list. 到好友列表中。 Cohen: And sometimes, you know, they would, like, 科恩有時候,你知道, 他們會,喜歡, let a girl know you didn't make the cut anymore 讓女孩知道你已經不受歡迎了。 by taking her out of everyone else's AIM profile. 通過把她從其他人的AIM資料中刪除。 Abby Tang: AIM was the best way to get bullied. 唐艾比。AIM是最好的被欺負的方式。 People would make these group chats 人們會讓這些群聊 and, like, invite me into them, 並且,喜歡,邀請我進入他們。 and then they would, like, start saying nasty things. 然後他們會一樣, 開始說討厭的事情。 DiFiore: I probably have catfished people on AIM. DiFiore:我可能在AIM上陰謀過人。 Carlson: Teenage drama, friends, love, 卡爾森:青春期的戲劇、朋友、愛情。 all the things were on AIM. 所有的東西都在AIM上。 Ortakales: After school got out, it's like, Ortakales。放學後,它的喜歡。 that's how you could talk to your friends. 這就是你和你朋友說話的方式。 Antonelli: We would go home, like, immediately, get on AIM, 安東內利:我們會回家,就像,馬上,上AIM。 and start talking to each other, like, for hours. 並開始互相交談,喜歡,幾個小時。 Appolonia: I remember that adrenaline rush, 阿波羅尼亞。我記得那種腎上腺素的衝動。 like, rushing back to my computer 喜歡,衝回我的電腦 to see, like, what my crush might have said, 看看,喜歡,我的暗戀可能說, or something like that. 或類似的東西。 Carlson: AIM was a key part of my adolescence. Carlson。AIM是我青春期的一個重要組成部分。 I think I met a girlfriend on AIM. 我想我在AIM上認識了一個女朋友。 Appolonia: It was pre-BBM, texting, Facebook messaging. Appolonia。那是BBM,簡訊,Facebook的前消息。 It was really the first way of feeling instantly connected. 這真的是第一種感覺瞬間聯繫的方式。 Antonelli: Vine, rest in peace, 安東內利:維恩,安息吧。 was a very wonderful video-making app, and I miss it. 是一款非常精彩的視頻製作應用,我很懷念它。 Barranco: RIP, Vine. It's just, like, part of millennial, 巴蘭科:RIP,Vine。這只是,喜歡,千禧年的一部分。 Gen Z culture. Z世代文化。 Quoting Vines is something that, like, 引用藤蔓是什麼,喜歡。 people my age just can do. 我這個年齡的人就可以做。 Trisha Bonthu: It was a big part of my personality, 崔莎-邦圖:這是我個性的重要組成部分。 like, growing up in high school. 就像,在高中長大的。 I think everyone quoted Vines. 我想大家都引用了維恩斯的話。 Genuinely, like, a big part of my high-school experience 真正的,像,我的高中經歷的一個重要組成部分。 was going to my friend's house 是去我朋友家 and spending hours watching Vines. 並花幾個小時看Vines。 Barranco: God knows I still end up 巴蘭科:天知道我最後還是會被 at, like, 2 in the morning watching Vine compilations. 在一樣,凌晨2點看Vine編譯。 Vine clip: Hey, Tara, you want some? 藤蔓剪輯。嘿,塔拉,你想要一些? Tara: It's f------ empty! Yeet! Tara:這是f------空的!葉子! Barranco: [laughing] Just, like, the spontaneity of the 巴蘭科:[笑]只是,像,自發性的。 soda can getting, like, tossed across the hallway 蘇打水罐得到一樣,扔在走廊上。 and the use of "yeet" that proliferated culture after that. 以及此後增殖培養的 "yeet "的使用。 Truly inspiring. 真正的鼓舞人心。 Murphy: "'Road work ahead'? Uh, yeah. 莫非:"'前路漫漫'?呃,是的。 I sure hope it does." 我當然希望是這樣。" Barranco: There was a very loyal fan base behind Vine, 巴蘭科:Vine背後有一個非常忠實的粉絲群體。 and a lot of people were very upset that it went away. 和很多人都很不高興,它走了。 I remember when I heard about Vine for the first time, 記得第一次聽說Vine的時候。 I was like, "What the heck are people going to do 我當時想,"什麼是地獄的人要做 with six-second videos?" 與六秒視頻?" Like, what could you accomplish in six seconds? 比如,你能在六秒鐘內完成什麼? It's so stupid. 它是如此愚蠢。 Bonthu: You only have six seconds to make a joke. 邦圖:你只有六秒鐘的時間來開個玩笑。 Unless you're, like, really funny, 除非你是一樣,真的很有趣。 it was hard to make Vines. 很難讓藤蔓。 Antonelli: Well, I think Vine really challenged 安東內利:好吧,我覺得維恩真的是挑戰了。 a lot of people to get creative 很多人都在搞創作 and condense their humor 凝練其幽默感 down into such a format 變成這樣 where everything has to matter in that six seconds 在那六秒鐘內,一切都很重要 and every joke has to land. 而每個笑話都要落地。 My favorite Vine is "Back at it again at Krispy Kreme." 我最喜歡的Vine是 "又回到了Krispy Kreme" Clip: Back at it again at Krispy Kreme. 夾子又回到了Krispy Kreme。 Frank: MoviePass is something I wanted so deeply to work. 弗蘭克:MoviePass是我深深想要的東西,工作。 Bonthu: I did have MoviePass, and I used it for, like, 邦圖:我確實有MoviePass,我用它來,像。 a bit of a summer, and then it was like, 有點夏天,然後就像。 we suck, and we don't work anymore. 我們吸,我們不工作了。 Lisa Paradise: MoviePass was a way to see basically 麗莎天堂。MoviePass was a way to see basically as many movies as you want in a week. 一週內想看多少電影就看多少電影。 When I heard about MoviePass, I signed myself up, 當我聽說MoviePass的時候,我自己也報了名。 I signed my roommate up, 我給我的室友報了名。 and I signed my boyfriend at the time up. 和我當時的男朋友簽約了。 I saw every movie that was in theaters. 我看了所有上映的電影。 You saw movies you didn't really want to see 你看了你並不想看的電影。 because, why not? It was free. 因為,為什麼不呢?它是免費的。 I feel like everyone you knew 我覺得你認識的每個人 had MoviePass for a hot second. 有MoviePass的熱秒。 Frank: Great, makes sense, I see a movie every single week. 弗蘭克:太好了,有道理,我每週都會看一部電影。 This is a bargain. I live in New York City, 這是一個便宜貨。我住在紐約市。 going to the movies costs almost $20. 去電影院看電影要花差不多20元。 This couldn't be cheaper. 這不能再便宜了。 They certainly aren't making money, so I have to get in now. 他們肯定是不賺錢的,所以我現在必須要進去。 Paradise: It was like being a teenager again 天堂。就像又回到了少年時代 when your parents are paying for you to go to the movies. 當你的父母為你支付去看電影。 Nate Lee: I saved a lot of money through MoviePass. Nate Lee:我通過MoviePass省了很多錢。 Until it was demolished. 直到被拆遷。 Paradise: I probably saw at least three movies a week. 天堂。我大概每週至少看三部電影。 They were literally just giving you money 他們真的只是給你錢 to go see a movie. 去看電影。 Give me an inch, I will take the whole Oscar lineup. 給我一寸,我就拿下整個奧斯卡陣容。 Frank: And I abused it to no end. 弗蘭克。我濫用它沒有盡頭。 I saw "Black Panther" four times using my MoviePass, 我用我的MoviePass看了四次《黑豹》。 and they made the rule that you could only see 他們規定,你只能看到。 a movie one time, like, the next week. 一部電影的時間,喜歡,下週。 Like, I'm convinced that "Black Panther" 就像,我相信 "黑豹"。 is the reason they had to make that rule. 是他們不得不制定這個規則的原因。 Lee: At its peak, I watched 李:巔峰時期,我看了 every single movie in the theater. 每一部電影在影院。 Paradise: I wanted it to last forever, 天堂。我想讓它永遠持續下去 and even when it started to die, I clung for too long. 甚至當它開始死亡的時候,我堅持了太久。 Lee: Well, usually, when things are too good to be true, 李:嗯,通常情況下,當事情好到不能再好的時候。 it is too good to be true. 妙不可言 That's I think the biggest lesson I learned from MoviePass. 這是我認為我從MoviePass中學到的最大教訓。 Frank: The last, like, two months I had MoviePass, 弗蘭克:最近,好像是兩個月,我有MoviePass。 I was, like, arguing with myself on a daily basis, 我當時,每天都在和自己爭論。 like, "Do I still have this? 如:"我還有這個嗎? Does it make sense for me to keep this?" 我留著這個有意義嗎?" But it was such a terrible service. 但就是這樣一個糟糕的服務。 It didn't do anything that I wanted from it, 它並沒有起到任何我想要的作用。 and I, like, ended up not seeing any movies 而我,喜歡,最終沒有看到任何電影 towards the end of it. 在它的最後。 Lee: And I think you can't ignore MoviePass, 李:而且我覺得你不能忽視MoviePass。 just because it really started 只因 this whole subscription phase. 這整個訂閱階段。 These subscription services 這些訂閱服務 that are so convenient to use now 現在方便使用的 would not be around if it wasn't for MoviePass. 如果不是因為MoviePass,就不會出現在這裡。 Carlson: Blockbuster was a place where they stored Blockbuster是一個他們存放物品的地方。 Netflix movies on tape. Netflix電影的錄音帶。 Shayanne Gal: Blockbuster was, like, my family's, Shayanne Gal:Blockbuster是一樣,我的家庭的。 one of our greatest traditions. 我們最偉大的傳統之一。 That was the best surprise ever, 這是最棒的驚喜了。 when my dad was like, "We're going to Blockbuster." 當我的爸爸很喜歡, "我們要去百視達。" Carlson: If the one copy of the video you wanted to watch 卡爾森:如果你想看的那份視頻的副本。 was not at Blockbuster, you could drive 不是在Blockbuster,你可以開車。 another 10 or 15 minutes to a Hollywood Video. 再過10到15分鐘就能看到好萊塢的視頻。 Ortakales: Blockbuster was an amazing, magical place to go 奧塔卡萊斯。Blockbuster was an amazing, magical place to go (Blockbuster是個神奇的地方) when you're a 10-year-old kid in the middle of nowhere. 當你是一個10歲的孩子 在中間的地方。 It felt so expansive and, like, 感覺很廣闊,而且,像。 "Oh, my gosh, there's so many movies. "哦,我的天,有這麼多電影。 I could watch any movie that I want." 我可以看任何我想看的電影。" Carlson: And you walk around, 卡爾森。你走來走去。 and you're looking at all the boxes 你在看所有的盒子 and saying which ones look cool, and.... 並說哪些人看起來很酷,和....。 For me, it was like, 對我來說,這就像。 what kind of "Inspector Gadget" movie do they have? 他們有什麼樣的 "小工具督察 "電影? Gal: I only rented Mary-Kate and Ashley movies. 高爾:我只租瑪麗-凱特和阿什利的電影。 Ortakales: I would go straight, make a beeline Ortakales。我會直走,做一條直線 to the kid's section, 到兒童區。 and then find my movie while my parents 然後找到我的電影,而我的父母 would, like, be in their section 會,喜歡,在他們的部分 picking out whatever new release they wanted to watch. 挑選出他們想看的任何新版本。 Gal: And then, at the checkout, pick out, like, a Nerds Rope 高爾。然後,在結賬時,挑選出一樣,一個書呆子繩子 or a chocolate or whatever they had at the time. 或巧克力或任何他們當時有。 That experience of going with a family member, 那種和家人一起去的經歷。 loved one, to a place like that 親人,到那樣的地方 and being able to, like, bond over those things 並能夠一樣,粘合在這些東西 is not replaceable. 是不能更換的。 Our brains are now wired in the, like, binge mode. 我們的大腦現在被連接在,比如,狂歡模式。 Like, one movie's not enough. 就像,一部電影是不夠的。 Like, one episode's not enough. 就像,一集還不夠。 I'd have to go to Blockbuster, like, every day for it. 我得去Blockbuster,喜歡,每天都要去買。 Ortakales: Oh. Well, now I'm definitely team Netflix. Ortakales。Oh. - 好吧,現在我絕對是Netflix的一員了。好吧,現在我絕對是Netflix的團隊。 Gal: Netflix, if I had to choose one, 高爾。Netflix,如果我不得不選擇一個。 but I feel like there could have been an ecosystem 但我覺得本來可以有一個生態系統的 where they both existed. 他們都存在的地方。 Carlson: I miss Blockbuster, but that's OK. 卡爾森:我很想念Blockbuster,不過沒關係。 Netflix is great. Netflix是偉大的。 Frank: MP3 players are better 弗蘭克:MP3播放器更好 CD players are better tape players. CD機是比較好的磁帶機。 Do people still know what those are? 大家還知道那些是什麼嗎? Barranco: Yeah, I remember specifically upgrading 巴蘭科:是的,我記得我專門升級了。 from my CD player that I, like, hand-decorated 從我的CD播放器,我一樣,手工裝飾的 with rhinestones in, like, third grade 用水鑽在,像,三年級 and listened to the "SpongeBob SquarePants" 並聽了 "海綿寶寶"。 movie soundtrack on, but I remember all the cool kids 電影原聲帶,但我記得所有的酷孩子們 on the bus on field trips had iPod Touches. 在實地考察的大巴上有iPod Touches。 Frank: I used to have a CD player. 弗蘭克:我以前有一臺CD機。 It was, like, a good CD player. 這就像,一個好的CD播放器。 I remember it had all these, like, little stickers on it 我記得它有所有這些一樣,小貼紙就可以了。 that said, "Never skips," or, "Barely skips," or something, 說 "從不跳 "或者 "幾乎不跳 "之類的。 and that was the best we could hope for. 這就是我們所能期待的最好的結果。 Like, it sometimes skipped, and that was fine. 就像,它有時跳過,這是很好的。 Lee: I just constantly wanted a new one. 李:我只是不斷地想要一個新的。 I mean, the thing with, like, the iPod MP3 players, 我的意思是,事情與一樣,iPod MP3播放器。 if you look at, like, Classic, Touch, and Nano, 如果你看看,像,經典、觸摸和納米。 all of them were extremely different. 都是極為不同的。 There was a reason to switch. 有理由換。 Very early on, 很早的時候。 most MP3 players were mostly the same, I think, 我想,大多數MP3播放器大多是一樣的。 so I didn't really switch around, and I, like, 所以我並沒有真正的換來換去,而我,喜歡。 stuck with one for a long time. 堅持了很久的一個。 Frank: I think MP3 players are flawed 弗蘭克:我認為MP3播放器是有缺陷的 because they only have one function, 因為它們只有一個功能。 but only because we live in the world now 只是因為我們生活在這個世界上 where you expect it to do so much more. 在你期望它能做得更多的地方。 At the time that they were created, 在他們創建的時候。 it was mind-blowing! Genuinely mind-blowing. 這是令人震撼的!真正的震撼人心。 "This holds all the music?!" "這裡面裝的是所有的音樂?"! Lee: And then iPhone sort of made every MP3 player useless. 李:然後iPhone算是讓每個MP3播放器都沒用了。 Cohen: A BlackBerry is kind of like a mini-computer. 科恩。黑莓手機就像一臺迷你電腦。 A BlackBerry is kind of like a mini -computer. Frank: BlackBerry is, like, the saddest 弗蘭克:黑莓是,最悲哀的。 version of a smartphone. 版的智能手機。 Paradise: BlackBerry was my first smartphone, 天堂。黑莓是我的第一部智能手機 and I remember it being so cool that I could get internet 我記得它是如此的酷,我可以得到互聯網 and Brick Breaker, like, RIP Brick Breaker. 和磚頭斷路器,喜歡,RIP磚頭斷路器。 BlackBerry was, I think, the first smartphone 我想,黑莓手機是第一款智能手機。 that everybody used. 大家都用的。 Frank: Now you have the luxury of being like, 弗蘭克:現在你可以奢侈的像。 "Oh, it would be like if iPhones were half as cool." "哦,這就像如果iPhone有一半的酷一樣。" Cohen: Everyone had a BlackBerry, and I was 科恩。每個人都有一部黑莓手機,而我 begging my parents to get me one. 求我的父母給我一個。 My favorite part was BBM, 我最喜歡的部分是BBM。 which was the BlackBerry Messenger. 這就是黑莓信使。 I loved pinging people. 我喜歡跟人打招呼。 It was almost like a poke on Facebook, 這幾乎就像在臉書上的戳。 but a bit more aggressive because you would ping them 但更激進一些,因為你會向他們發號施令。 and it would send them a ping in all caps 然後就會給他們發一個大寫的 "Ping"。 with a bunch of exclamation marks, 用一堆感嘆號。 and to this day I still text people the word "ping." 到現在我還會給別人發短信說 "平 "字。 Frank: My BlackBerry that I had in college 我大學時的黑莓手機 was, like, the first phone I had 是一樣,我的第一個手機 that, like, did anything other than make phone calls. ,喜歡,做任何事情 其他比打電話。 Like, it had a full keyboard 比如,它有一個完整的鍵盤 and, like, honestly what feels now like 而且,像,說實話,什麼感覺現在像 the world's tiniest screen, but at the time was huge. 世界上最微小的螢幕,但在當時卻是巨大的。 It was amazing. 太神奇了 I was like, I'm basically a Wall Street hedge-fund manager 我當時想,我基本上是一個華爾街對沖基金經理。 because I have a BlackBerry. 因為我有一部黑莓手機。 I can answer emails and send text messages. 我可以回覆電子郵件和發送簡訊。 I'm so chill. 我好冷淡。 I'm gonna wear this blazer to class, 我要穿這件西裝外套去上課。 and everyone's gonna know I'm fancy. Insane. 每個人都會知道我是花哨的。瘋了。 Meg Teckman-Fullard: Amazon Dash buttons were something that Meg Teckman-Fullard。Amazon Dash buttons were something that I still have a few of, I still kind of use them, 我還有一些,我還有點用。 but they're kind of dying. 但他們是一種死亡。 The way that they wanted people to use it was, like, 他們希望人們使用的方式是,像。 you stick your Tide Pod thing 你把你的潮汐花苞的事情 to your washing machine, so when you go, 到你的洗衣機,所以當你去。 "Oh, I'm out of Tide Pods," "哦,我沒有潮汐艙了"。 boop! It orders it automatically. 啵!它自動下令。 Matt Stuart: I think Amazon saw it as a way of 馬特-斯圖亞特:我認為亞馬遜將其視為一種方式。 customer lock-in and convenience. 客戶鎖定和方便。 "Just tap it, and we'll send you more." "只要點一下,我們就會給你送來更多的東西。" And so it's just a very, like, kind of sticky way 所以它只是一個非常,喜歡,一種粘性的方式。 to keep your customer base. 來保持你的客戶群。 Teckman-Fullard: There's something really nice Teckman -Fullard。有一些很好的東西 about the physical and the digital 關於物理和數字 interacting with each other in that kind of, 相互交流,在那種。 like, George Jetson kind of way. 像,喬治・杰特森那種方式。 Jade Tungul: Amazon found that, like, customers 玉通古爾:亞馬遜發現,像,客戶。 were using other avenues. 正在使用其他管道。 Like, people I think were using Amazon Alexa 就像,我認為人們在使用亞馬遜Alexa。 'cause you can use your Alexa. 因為你可以用你的Alexa。 People were also using the Subscribe & Save option. 人們也在使用 "訂閱和保存 "選項。 Teckman-Fullard: Opening the app or opening it Teckman-Fullard。打開應用程序或打開它 on a web browser is super easy. 在網絡瀏覽器上是超級簡單的。 This is just one extra-easy step, 這只是一個額外簡單的步驟。 and I like easy. 而且我喜歡輕鬆。 MagSafe is a technology in which Mac laptops MagSafe是一項技術,它可以讓Mac筆記本電腦的性能得到提升。 were able to charge with a power cord 能夠用電源線充電 that magnetically connected instead of actually 磁力連接而非實際 having to stick something in. 不得不把東西塞進去。 Jason Sanchez: I guess it's MagSafe because it's 傑森-桑切斯:我想它是MagSafe,因為它是。 both magnetic and safe. 既有磁性又安全。 The cord just comes off; your laptop stays on your table. 電線就這樣脫落了,你的筆記本就留在桌子上。 There's no accidents. 沒有意外。 There's no danger of that getting knocked over. 沒有被打翻的危險。 Apple, in their sort of infinite wisdom, 蘋果,在他們那種無限的智慧。 decided to go away from the MagSafe for USB-C, 決定從USB-C的MagSafe。 which is great, USB-C is great, 這是偉大的,USB-C是偉大的。 but it doesn't need to be every single port. 但不需要是每一個端口。 In fact, I don't have one of the newer 事實上,我沒有一個較新的。 MacBooks because of it. MacBooks,因為它。 Carlson: The best thing about Blockbuster, though, 卡爾森:不過,Blockbuster最好的地方。 was just going and not knowing what you wanted. 就是去了也不知道自己想要什麼。 If you don't know what you want on Netflix, 如果你不知道你想在Netflix上看到什麼。 it is chaos. You just feel desperate. 它是混亂的。你只是覺得絕望。 I got the autoplay coming at me, and it's just like, stop! 我得到了自動播放來找我,它只是喜歡,停止!
B1 中級 中文 弗蘭克 黑莓 電影 耳機 播放器 手機 這十年死掉的科技 (Tech That Died This Decade) 4 1 林宜悉 發佈於 2020 年 10 月 24 日 更多分享 分享 收藏 回報 影片單字