05 FT記者眼中的舊金山:說著“灣區(qū)方言”的創(chuàng)新之城
當(dāng)來到舊金山,地地道道的英國人、FT通訊記者Hannah Kuchler發(fā)現(xiàn),那個曾經(jīng)她記憶里“任由保守地區(qū)來的流亡之徒放縱的避風(fēng)港”,已經(jīng)變成一座創(chuàng)新之城。除了不同的文化與生活方式,舊金山甚至還是一座有自己語言的城市。
London to San Francisco: learning the language in a start-up haven
本文原文作者系FT通訊記者Hannah Kuchler
I first fell for San Francisco as a teenager holed up in my north London bedroom, reading my mum's tattered copies of the Tales of the City series.
我初次傾心舊金山是在年少時候。那時我窩在倫敦北部家中臥室里,讀著媽媽破舊的系列小說《城市故事》(美國作家Armistead Maupin所著系列小說)。
我三年前抵達舊金山時,這里早已不像是書中所描繪的,是一個任由保守地區(qū)來的流亡之徒放縱的避風(fēng)港(a permissive haven for exiles from prim provinces)了。取而代之的是,舊金山成為了開發(fā)商們反復(fù)允諾(oft-repeated promise)的、將會用軟件改變世界的天堂。
Coming to cover technology for the Financial Times, I was 27 and tech-competent for London.But here l had to catch-up: ditching my BlackBerry for an iPhone, my Dell laptop for a MacBook and taxis for Uber.
初來這里為英國《金融時報》報道科技新聞的時候,我是一個27歲的倫敦“科技通”。但是來到舊金山,我發(fā)現(xiàn)我不得不奮起直追:把我的黑莓丟掉換成iPhone,戴爾筆記本要換成MacBook,打車也要用優(yōu)步。
舊金山金門大橋
那時候我還鬧了個笑話。
I made an early error with the ride-hailing app, not then popular in London, when I ordered what I thought was an SUV to take home new furniture.I cringed as a slick black limo arrived to drive my boxes to my new apartment.
早前我在用這款在倫敦并不流行的打車軟件(優(yōu)步)時,犯了個錯誤:我以為約了一輛SUV來幫我往家里搬新家具。當(dāng)開來的是一輛锃亮的黑色加長轎車,把我的箱子搬到新公寓的時候,我著實畏縮了一下。
甚至連語言上,我都要重新學(xué)習(xí)一些新的英文用法:
I also had to learn a new lexicon.An early disagreement led a PR at a tech company to ask me for a drink to “debug this”, a term usually used when engineers remove flaws from software.
我還不得不學(xué)會一些新詞。早前,因為一次意見分歧,某科技公司的公關(guān)人員約我去喝點東西,來debug這個問題——debug通常是用來形容修復(fù)軟件漏洞的。
舊金山高新產(chǎn)業(yè)的爆發(fā)式增長,讓金錢好像都失去了它的意義。就在我剛開始工作僅僅四天之后,Twitter就宣布提交了IPO文件,估值在此前的幾周內(nèi)翻了三倍,或超過100億美元;在聽到Facebook花了220億美元買了僅有50個雇員的WhatsApp后,我驚得下巴半年都合不上(jaws dropped six months later);優(yōu)步以680億美金的估值拿下了籌資,人們眼睛都不帶眨一下的。
A mere billion-dollar valuation, once seen as rare as a unicorn, no longer seems noteworthy.
曾經(jīng)極少的估值逾10億美元、被珍視為“獨角獸”公司的企業(yè),如今都不足為奇了。
舊金山與時尚絕緣,取而代之的是印著各種初創(chuàng)公司Logo的T恤。
Frantic app-makers fill San Francisco's streets, wearing T-shirts with logos of their start-up.
舊金山的街道擠滿了狂熱的應(yīng)用開發(fā)者,穿著印有他們自己的初創(chuàng)公司logo的T恤。
本文作者、FT通訊記者Hannah Kuchler在Instagram上分享自己在舊金山的生活。
而這個城市更像是一個新app的試驗場。
Hungry? Food is delivered by one of dozens of on-demand delivery apps, from Caviar to Sprig.Fancy a drink? Alcohol can be ordered from Saucey or DoorDash.Break up? You now have to speed learn the latest dating app — Bumble, Hinge, The League — before everyone moves on to the next Tinder copycat.
餓了?有一大把按需訂餐的應(yīng)用,比如Caviar或者Sprig。要喝一杯嗎?Saucey或者DoorDash上可以訂購酒水。分手了?你現(xiàn)在需要趕緊花時間學(xué)一下最新的約會軟件Bumble、Hinge或者The League了,這樣才能趕在人人都撲向下一山寨Tinder(一個速配約會類手機應(yīng)用)之前。
和1970年代不同,如今的舊金山給人的感覺更像是住在未來。
Driving around Silicon Valley, an hour to the south, it is not unusual to see Google's driverless cars in the lane next to you.Drinkers in bars regularly discuss “the singularity” — when humans and robots will become one — and everyone seems to know someone who knows someone strategising to defeat death, Ray Kurzweil-style.
往南約一個小時車程,行駛在硅谷,看見谷歌的無人駕駛汽車在你旁邊的車道上行駛,一點也不足為奇。酒吧里喝酒的人們都是討論著“the singularity”(奇點,是指人類和機器人合而為一的時間點),似乎每個人都有個“朋友的朋友”正規(guī)劃著如何戰(zhàn)勝死亡,就像雷蒙德·庫茨魏爾(谷歌工程總監(jiān),作家、發(fā)明家和未來學(xué)家)一樣。
全新的環(huán)境,還改變了以往的生活習(xí)慣。
I have not yet tried defeating death but California has converted this Londoner, who used to prefer an after-work pint, to the joys of exercise.Fuelled by an avocado a day, I now spend my weekends hiking on trails around the bay.
我沒有想著要戰(zhàn)勝死亡,但是加利福尼亞卻將我一個地地道道的、習(xí)慣下班喝一杯的倫敦人,變得開始享受運動的愉快了?,F(xiàn)在的我每天都用牛油果來給自己加油,把周末時光都用在沿著海岸線的徒步上了。
《跑者世界》雜志將舊金山譽為“最適合慢跑的城市”。
舊金山也有它自己的矛盾與困擾。比如,與科技和經(jīng)濟一同爆發(fā)式增長的,還有房價。
科技公司的爆發(fā)式出現(xiàn),還影響著那些非科技領(lǐng)域工作者們的生活。飛速的發(fā)展迫使租金在一年上升了20%,引起了舊金山本地居民和科技行業(yè)之間的摩擦。
High rents forced me to move in with roommates after a year of living alone.Last year, a tent on someone's back patio was rented for almost $1,000 a month in Mountain View, where Google is based, stipulating that the tenant would be allowed inside the house for one shower a day.The advert went viral because no one could tell if it was a stunt or a real offer.
高額的租金讓我不得不結(jié)束了一年的獨居生活,搬去與室友合住。去年,在山景城(谷歌總部所在地),一頂在別人家后院的帳篷租金要價1000美元/月,還規(guī)定只允許租客每天進入屋里一次淋浴。這一條廣告迅速像病毒一樣傳播開來,沒人知道這是個噱頭還是真的。
Older San Franciscans, lured to the city as a place of free thought and free love, often resent the so-called “techies” for raising prices, even though some are homeowners who have made millions by selling to them.
曾經(jīng)被這座城市的自由思想和自由戀愛吸引而來的老舊金山人,常常因為飆漲的物價,而怨恨那些所謂的“技術(shù)咖”——盡管有些房屋所有者已經(jīng)靠把房子賣給那些“工程師”,賺了上百萬。
Even within the tech industry, some decry newcomers who see Silicon Valley as a new Wall Street, a place to get rich rather than change the world.They see innovations as following in the freethinking traditions of the West Coast but view the new gold rush with distaste.
即便是在科技產(chǎn)業(yè)內(nèi),也有人責(zé)難說那些新來的人將硅谷視為新華爾街,來這里為了發(fā)財而非改變世界。那些人認為,創(chuàng)新是跟隨西海岸自由思想一脈相承下來的傳統(tǒng),而厭惡新一輪趨之若鶩的“淘金熱”。
舊金山勝景:霧鎖金門
San Francisco is still a hub for new ideas, where young people use the distance from the rest of the world to experiment with living differently.
舊金山依舊是新思路匯集的中心。年輕人們利用著這里與世界其他地方之間的距離,體驗嘗試著不同的方式生活。
詞匯總結(jié)
fall for: 迷戀,愛上
I first fell for San Francisco as a teenager holed up in my north London bedroom, reading my mum's tattered copies of the Tales of the City series.
我初次傾心舊金山是在年少時候。那時我窩在倫敦北部家中臥室里,讀著媽媽破舊的系列小說《城市故事》(美國作家Armistead Maupin所著系列小說)。
go viral 像病毒一樣傳播開來
The advert went viral because no one could tell if it was a stunt or a real offer.
這一條廣告迅速像病毒一樣傳播開來,沒人知道這是個噱頭還是真的。
ride-hailing app 打車軟件
I made an early error with the ride-hailing app, not then popular in London.
早前我在用這款在倫敦并不流行的打車軟件(優(yōu)步)時,犯了個錯誤。
Unicorn ['ju?n?k??n]
n.獨角獸
A mere billion-dollar valuation, once seen as rare as a unicorn, no longer seems noteworthy.
曾經(jīng)極少的估值逾10億美元、被珍視為“獨角獸”公司的企業(yè),如今都不足為奇了。
lure [l(j)??]
n.誘惑;餌;誘惑物
vt.誘惑;引誘
Older San Franciscans, lured to the city as a place of free thought and free love, often resent the so-called “techies” for raising prices, even though some are homeowners who have made millions by selling to them.
曾經(jīng)被這座城市的自由思想和自由戀愛吸引而來的老舊金山人,常常因為飆漲的物價,而怨恨那些所謂的“技術(shù)咖”——盡管有些房屋所有者已經(jīng)靠把房子賣給那些“工程師”,賺了上百萬。
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