三星不久前發(fā)布的旗艦機(jī)型Galaxy Note 7,花大力氣研究的虹膜識(shí)別、IP68級(jí)別防水等諸多黑科技被應(yīng)用到這款高端智能手機(jī),但人們記住最多的卻是“爆炸門”。熱衷于消費(fèi)者技術(shù)創(chuàng)新的各大科技公司,到底哪些創(chuàng)新才真正深得人心、值得一試?
測(cè)試中可能遇到的詞匯和知識(shí):
specs規(guī)格,說明書[speks]
pique刺激;傷害…自尊心[pi?k]
vibrate振動(dòng);顫動(dòng)[va?'bre?t]
cease to停止;不再出現(xiàn)某種情況
pundit專家;博學(xué)者['p?nd?t]
lacklustre無光澤的;無生氣的['l?k,l?st?]
by leaps and bounds飛躍地,突飛猛進(jìn)地
sketch素描;略圖;梗概[sket?]
By Kate Bevan
When Samsung recalled some 2.5m new Galaxy Note 7 smartphones in early September,it was a stark reminder of how difficult it is to differentiate a product,however good,in a crowded marketplace.
The Note 7 is undoubtedly a good device,with its octa-core processor,4GB of RAM and its sparklingly clear 5.7in display. But it is the exploding batteries that people will remember the device for,not those top-of-the-range specs.
Similarly,the iPhone 7,which launched a few days later,is not sparking discussion about its A10 processor,dual camera or“taptic”home button,which vibrates to alert you that it has been pressed; it is the fact that Apple ditched the analogue headphone jack that piqued people’s interest.
Apple has long been revered as an innovator and previous bold decisions to dispense with hardware features that we take for granted have eventually been accepted after the initial outcry: nobody misses the floppy disk drive or the optical drive now.
So perhaps this“innovation”will eventually cease to feel like the big deal it did when Tim Cook,Apple’s chief executive,unveiled the jack-free iPhone to scepticism and outright derision. So what exactly is“innovation”? What drives it and when and why should you innovate?
Smartphones have become increasingly uninspiring in the past few years,since the hardware-makers moved away from the flip-phones,circular phones,swivel phones and other curious-looking devices that characterised the first wave of mobiles and settled on the wide and rectangular form. There is some variation in size and materials,you can choose between a plastic or metal body,but these days the mobile phone is a slim rectangular slab with more or less rounded corners and a shiny touchscreen.
All the innovation now takes place inside the device,in the hardware and software that provides an increasingly dizzying range of functions: we use smartphones to guide us to a meeting,to pay for a coffee,to go on a date. We can even have conversations with our smartphones thanks to Siri,Cortana and OK Google,yet pundits grumble about Apple having lost its way since the death of Steve Jobs and about lacklustre hardware offerings from other manufacturers.
The point is that innovation is hard to convey to would-be customers when so much of it goes on behind the scenes,as it were,and it is therefore difficult for companies to make their product stand out.
This is true for other hardware,too: the trusty laptop is a case in point.
Your 2016 laptop probably does not look very different to the one you had five or 10 years ago,yet what it can do has come on by leaps and bounds in that time.
What should drive innovation is identifying a new market and developing a product to fill that. However,it is probably not too cynical to note that what has tended to drive innovative hardware designs has been the need of manufacturers to come up with new products to sell into increasingly saturated markets. The boom in tablet purchases since 2012 has matched the ongoing decline in PC sales as buyers put off buying a PC and turned to tablets instead.
Tablets,however,have driven a fresh wave of innovation,with hybrid and convertible devices,such as Microsoft’s range of Surface PCs and Apple’s iPad Pro,that aim to combine the convenience of a tablet with the function of a more powerful device. Suddenly there is a much bigger range of devices to choose from: you can have a tablet that turns into a laptop,a tablet you can write and draw on with a“pen”,or a cover for your tablet that becomes a keyboard.
Right now on my desk I have the laptop I am writing this column on,a solid and respectable Lenovo Thinkpad,and two Android tablets: a Google Pixel C and a Lenovo Yoga Book.
The Yoga Book is probably the most interesting of the three devices. Launched in September at the IFA technology show in Berlin,it is a 10in Android tablet(with a Windows version coming soon) that folds open like a laptop.
The panel where you would expect to find a keyboard is flat and lights up with a virtual keyboard when summoned,but turn this off and whip out the“pen”and you can write on the panel and watch your scribbles appear on the screen,saving your handwritten notes in digital form. Swap the pen’s nib to a ballpoint and add paper and you can have both analogue handwritten notes and their digital equivalent captured on to a device that is thin and light enough to throw in a bag.
It is not perfect — there is no built-in way to turn those digitised scribbles into type that you can import into,say,a Word document,and it is in the same price range as a capable laptop — but it is a thoughtful take on familiar devices.
I think the Yoga Book is an excellent example of what the best innovations really are — and they are not the flashiest or the most radical paradigm shifts.
The best and most useful innovations build thoughtfully on what has gone before to deliver functions — such as paying for coffee with a wave of your smartphone or using your tablet to scribble down notes and sketches — that you did not know you wanted or needed.
1.What piqued people’s interest for iPhone 7?
A. “taptic”home button
B. A10 processor
C. dual camera
D. headphone jack
答案(1)
2.How have smartphones performed in the past few years?
A. uninspiring
B. surprising
C. annoying
D. with the same material
答案(2)
3.What is the difficulty to attract would-be customers on innovations?
A. the death of Steve Jobs
B. innovations take place inside the device
C. too much lacklustre hardware offerings
D. devices now offer the same functions
答案(3)
4.Which one is not right as the feature of the Yoga Book?
A. can have conversations with Cortana
B. with a virtual keyboard
C. saving handwritten notes in digital form
D. light enough
答案(4)
(1) 答案:D.headphone jack
解釋:iPhone 7在很多地方做出改變,但真正激起人們興趣的只是移除模擬信號(hào)的音頻接口。
(2) 答案:A.uninspiring
解釋:近年來智能手機(jī)的表現(xiàn)越來越平淡無奇。
(3) 答案:B.innovations take place inside the device
解釋:因?yàn)樘嗟母镄露及l(fā)生在屏幕之后,難以吸引潛在顧客去購買,因此很多科技公司的產(chǎn)品很難脫穎而出。
(4) 答案:A.can have conversations with Cortana
解釋:Yoga Book非常輕薄,可顯示光暈鍵盤,并將手寫內(nèi)容數(shù)字化。