注册并分享邀请链接,可获得视频播放与邀请奖励。

与「CALIFORNIA」相关的搜索结果

CALIFORNIA 贴吧
一个关键词就是一个贴吧,路径全站唯一。
创建贴吧
用户
未找到
包含 CALIFORNIA 的内容
Introducing Ask YouTube, our new conversational search experience in @YouTube. 📽️ With Ask YouTube, you can ask more complex search queries, like needing help planning a road trip through the California coast or wanting tips on how to teach your kid to ride a bike. You can even ask follow-up questions to continue refining what you’re looking for. Ask YouTube will compile the most relevant videos across all of YouTube’s catalogue — including long-form videos and Shorts — and provide an interactive, structured response instead of the usual list of video recommendations. Ask YouTube is currently available for Premium members in the U.S., and it’ll be rolling out to all YouTube users soon.
显示更多
0
116
1.7K
207
转发到社区
In 1990, the World Wide Web was invented on Steve Jobs' computer. Steve ignored it. This is the story I tell in my new book Steve Jobs in Exile. Here is what it should tell the rest of us about the moment we are in now. Steve was running NeXT, an unsuccessful computer company. He had been pushed out of Apple five years earlier and was burning his fortune trying to build a successor to the Macintosh. The machine NeXT sold was a matte-black magnesium cube -- expensive and beautiful and not selling. In October of that year, on the other side of the Atlantic, a British physicist named Tim Berners-Lee took delivery of a NeXT Cube at CERN, the physics laboratory on the Swiss-French border. He used it to invent the World Wide Web. The web ran on the Cube for its first year of existence. The revolution was happening on Steve's hardware, and yet Steve ignored it. Here is the question I keep thinking about from my book. If Steve Jobs, the most visionary tech mind of his generation, missed the Web, the most civilization-shaping tech of his lifetime, how are the rest of us supposed to see anything coming? Berners-Lee had been asking his boss at CERN for a NeXT Cube for months. His boss finally signed off, hoping to test the exotic Cube. "He suggested that I should buy one of these NeXT machines I'd been talking about so enthusiastically," Berners-Lee later told Fresh Air. "And if we needed a sort of test project to run on the NeXT machine ... 'Why not just do this hypertext thing you're talking about?'" The "test project" evolved into the World Wide Web. The problem Berners-Lee was trying to solve was not a glamorous one. CERN employed thousands of scientists from over a hundred countries, most cycling through on short assignments and taking their knowledge with them when they left. Berners-Lee was trying to keep institutional knowledge from walking out the door. He wanted a system that worked the way human memory does, where any piece of information could connect to any other without permission or central control. Through late 1990, he coded in his gray-floored office. The Cube's object-oriented system let him build in months what would have taken a year on anything else. By December, the first website went online. The World Wide Web now existed, running on a single black NeXT Cube in CERN's Building 31. Berners-Lee scrawled a warning on it in red ink: "This machine is a server. DO NOT POWER IT DOWN!!" Underneath the elegant interface he was building HTTP, HTML, and the server software that would deliver web pages. These three inventions would form much of the invisible plumbing of our modern connectivity. When a colleague of Berners-Lee's brought a demo of the Web to NeXT's headquarters in California, he could not get anyone there to pay attention. Nobody even dared show it to Steve, afraid he would dismiss it. NeXT was busy with its own internet plans, which Steve eventually killed. So back to the question. If Steve Jobs missed the web, how are the rest of us supposed to see whatever comes next? The honest answer is that we cannot. Nobody can. The rest of us are not going to outpattern-match Steve Jobs. But here is what I learned writing Steve Jobs in Exile. Transformations almost always begin in obscurity, on the margins, solving boring problems with boring tools. The web did not look revolutionary in 1990. It looked like a tool for sharing physics papers. We are in another such moment now. AI is the obvious changemaker. But the biggest transformations are rarely the obvious ones. The next one is happening somewhere right now, and it is trickier to spot than any sweeping proclamation about AI. We will recognize it, if we recognize it at all, from the unglamorous work few people are focused on. I will not speculate on what Steve would have made of AI today. But if he could miss the Web, the rest of us are going to have to look harder. Photo of the original CERN NeXT Cube courtesy of Robert Scoble.
显示更多
0
32
297
40
转发到社区
Taxes screw over both the companies and the states they’re in. Taxes didn’t build those big companies. They show up after the success. They sure as hell didn’t create Silicon Valley. The sky-high taxes came later, once it was already killing it. California basically turned its successful companies into hosts and started parasitically draining them for more and more cash, jacking up the rates year after year. They forget the first rule of parasitism: don’t kill the host. Companies only have so much tolerance before they say screw it and bail for another state with better deals and resources. And that breaking point is a lot lower these days.
显示更多
2 years ago: "Elon destroyed the Tesla brand globally! It'll never recover!" Today: #1# selling EV in California: Tesla Model Y #1# selling EV in the U.S.: Tesla Model Y #1# selling EV in Europe: Tesla Model Y #1# selling EV in China: Tesla Model Y
显示更多
0
662
17.6K
1.1K
转发到社区
One underrated part of SpaceX’s S-1: Starlink is becoming emergency connectivity infrastructure when traditional networks fail We’ve seen that during hurricanes and wildfires, when ground networks were damaged, overloaded, or unavailable Here are the metrics: • Hurricanes Helene + Milton: 10K Starlink kits delivered, 27K smartphones connected • California wildfires: 198K users helped, 96K SMS messages • Hurricane Melissa: 1K terminals provided, 2M+ SMS messages This is the bigger Starlink story It is not just internet access. It is a resilient connectivity when traditional networks fail Homes, businesses, first responders, relief teams, and ordinary people need communication most when infrastructure breaks That is where Starlink satellite connectivity becomes more than a product It becomes an emergency layer for the real world
显示更多
0
30
103
28
转发到社区
Streamer “hmblzayy” who is walking from Philly to California, asked his chat for prayers after stopping in a sundown town for the night since his next location was too far away.
显示更多
0
100
6.9K
152
转发到社区
The Top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100, 20 years ago this week. 1. SOS 2. Bad Day 3. Temperature 4. Ridin’ 5. Where’d You Go 6. What You Know 7. What’s Left of Me 8. Dani California 9. Over My Head (Cable Car) 10. Ms. New Booty
显示更多
BREAKING: Judicial Watch filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of a California political candidate and a state political party against the State of California due to its failure to maintain accurate voter rolls as required by the National Voter Registration Act (NVRA). “Judicial Watch’s federal lawsuit confirms California has a dirty voting rolls crisis – with thousands of old names on the rolls going back at least 10 years,” said Judicial Watch President @TomFitton. “Dirty voting rolls can mean dirty elections. And California and its counties must take immediate steps to clean the over 870,000 dirty names on the voting lists.”
显示更多
0
10
327
81
转发到社区
Falcon 9 launches 24 @Starlink satellites from California
0
111
2.2K
284
转发到社区
Watch Falcon 9 launch 24 @Starlink satellites to orbit from California
0
156
2K
326
转发到社区