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ASUS N71JV Battery

  • fasophiafrance
  • 2016年11月3日
  • 讀畢需時 7 分鐘

“I got bored,” said Sumner, explaining why he’s back at the helm of a new company, having twice come out of retirement – the first when he was still only in his early forties. “I was at home trying to play tennis and I wasn’t getting any better.”Instead of working on his serve, Sumner ploughed his energy into mentoring startups. This is how he met an entrepreneur with an idea he believed was so brilliant that he decided to help out and run the company himself. Now, as the unpaid CEO of MEEM – a phone-charging cable that also backs up all of the data on the device – he believes he’s sitting on another billion-pound opportunity.Kelly Sumner certainly doesn’t need the hassle of running a startup. He joined Commodore when he was 16 as a trainee electronics engineer and worked his way up to CEO in 13 rapid years. The Amiga-maker famously imploded in the mid-1990s, but Sumner moved on to enjoy even greater success, becoming the CEO of US game publisher GameTek, which was eventually sold to Take-Two Interactive.

While Sumner was at Take-Two, he helped put together a last-minute deal to acquire British games publisher BMG Interactive, which at that time had a middling games franchise called Grand Theft Auto on its books. GTA went on to become an enormous worldwide hit and Sumner became Take-Two’s CEO, before retiring early and selling his shares in the company in 2003.“I got bored, I was at home trying to play tennis and I wasn’t getting any better.” Sumner soon tired of tennis lessons and returned to the games industry as non-executive director of RedOctane, where his team came up with the idea for another seminal gaming hit: Guitar Hero. He took over as CEO in early 2006, but, just months into his tenure, RedOctane was sold to Activision and Sumner was looking for a new challenge.

After spending some time living in New York, Sumner returned to the UK, but decided he couldn’t face another job in the games industry. “I thought, I’ve played in the Premier League a couple of times, I don’t really want to play Sunday League now, and I don’t want the corporate bullshit, for want of a better word,” he said. Without any financial need to ever work again, Sumner decided to start investing in small companies and mentoring entrepreneurs, effectively becoming a “Dragon” without the camera crew. “No-one’s paid me a wage, no-one’s paid me any consultancy, I’ve done everything for free because – you know something – I was very lucky and successful, and I think I’ve got a responsibility to help other people.”

It was while scouring for his next investment that Sumner ended up chatting with an inventor called Anil Goel for hours. Goel had come up with a stupidly simple device that would stop people losing their photos, videos and messages every time they lost their phone. Called MEEM, the device is essentially a block of flash memory built into a smartphone-charging cable, which backs up the contents of the device every time it’s plugged in to charge. There’s no chance of forgetting backups and no need to set up cloud services: all you have to do is enter a PIN when it’s first set up. It’s perhaps the simplest backup system ever created.

Sumner immediately thought it was brilliant, but Goel was struggling to get the product off the ground.“He is a really lovely guy, but he looks like an Indian rock star,” said Sumner. “And with the greatest respect, rock stars don’t often garner the idea that you’re going to give them lots of money to produce a product, and he’d never produced one before. He needed someone to help him, he really did.” Sumner wasn’t only motivated by helping Goel stop sleeping on other people’s floors – he also wanted to find out if his own achievements were something of a fluke. “From an ego perspective, I have been very successful, but maybe I’ve been really lucky. Grand Theft Auto and Take-Two? Maybe it was really luck – I don’t think it was. Maybe Guitar Hero was really luck? I don’t think it was. How many times can someone be lucky? This will be the third time, and in a different industry so, from a personal perspective, I’ve something to prove to myself.”

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Years after its retirement, the MacBook found itself reborn as a sub-1kg ultraportable – and an astonishingly good one at that. However, 2016 has seen Apple release the second-generation Macbook into the wild. With subtly improved performance and dramatically improved battery life, all thanks to the new Skylake Core M processors, Apple has made the MacBook even more desirable. Click here to read our review of the latest 2016 Apple MacBook. The MacBook has been reborn – it now stands apart as the smallest, lightest laptop to ever wear the Apple logo. This is Apple’s attempt to redefine the ultraportable.On the face of it, Apple hasn’t had to do anything groundbreaking: it’s simply taken its traditional laptop formula and, with the help of Intel’s Core M processor and a tiny motherboard, shrunk it down into a 12in chassis. There’s a Retina display with an aspect ratio of 16:10, just as you’d expect to find on one of Apple’s MacBook Pro models; a full-sized keyboard; and a huge Force Touch trackpad beneath.

The result is one very light, very slim laptop. At 923g and 13.1mm thick – and that’s including the rubber feet on the underside – the MacBook is only 125g heavier than the Microsoft Surface Pro 3 without its Type Cover attached. What’s more, it’s slimmer, lighter and has a smaller footprint than Apple’s 11in MacBook Air.The MacBook is an alluringly petite laptop, but the fashion-conscious have another reason to rejoice: it now comes in a choice of Space Grey, Silver and Gold, so you can finally buy a MacBook to match your iPhone 6s and/or iPad Air 2.The MacBook’s attraction is more than skin-deep, however. This is a 12in laptop that, much of the time, is as comfortable to work upon as larger laptops. Set the MacBook side by side with its more powerful cousin, the MacBook Pro 13in with Retina Display, and you’ll see that the MacBook’s keyboard and touchpad are the larger of the two.

Each of the backlit keys is 40% bigger, and although they have very little travel, that’s something I very quickly got used to. A feather-light yet crisp dig of feedback leaves no doubt as to whether you’ve hit a key or not, and I was soon typing as comfortably and quickly as on my long-suffering office ThinkPad.However, anyone used to using a mechanical keyboard, or indeed any other keyboard at all, may find that the MacBook keyboard takes a lot of getting used to. Developer Marco Arment, in his review of the MacBook, described the keys as feeling clicky, "almost like the iPhone’s Home button", and there is something in what he's saying. In short, if you are considering the MacBook then I strongly advise you spend some time in your nearest Apple store trying the keyboard out - I suspect it's a love/hate thing.

The Force Touch trackpad is far less likely to divide opinion. It is wider, if a little less tall, than that of the 13in MacBook Pro. But it’s every bit as good. Once you get used to Force-clicking documents, pictures and hyperlinks in Safari to bring up quick previews in OS X, it becomes something you instinctively miss on a Boot Camp installation of Windows 8. And despite the fact that the pad sits a mere couple of millimetres below the spacebar, it never caused any accidental clicks or errant cursor movements – it just works.Apple MacBook (2015): The ultra-low profile keyboard works well, but takes a bit of getting used to At present, it's worth noting, Force Touch support is essentially only available within Apple's own applications. And even since the arrival of OS X El Capitan, there still aren't a huge number of third-party applications which take advantage of Force Touch – unlike 3D Touch on the iPhone 6s, it's taking much longer for developers to get to grips with what the technology is actually useful for.

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All told, Apple has put together an ultraportable laptop that’s unusually comfortable to use, whether it’s for work or play – one of Alphr's team uses a MacBook as his everyday work laptop, and the combination of portability and usability is difficult to beat. Factor in the little touches – such as the good-quality 480p iSight webcam and loud, crisp internal speakers – and it's unusually well-rounded for a sub-1kg laptop. The 12in, 2,304 x 1,440-resolution display is superb. Images and pin-sharp text gleam from corner to corner, and set next to Apple’s MacBook Airs, which still use the old TN panel technology, the two generations look light years apart.The high pixel density causes little in the way of practical problems, either. I preferred the extra desktop space afforded by the More Space setting in OS X, as it felt a touch cramped with scaling left at the default size, but it’s easy to tweak the setting to best suit your individual needs, or indeed the limits of your eyesight.

Indeed, the recent arrival of OS X El Capitan helps make the most of every one of those 3.3 million pixels. The new Split View feature joins two full-screen apps side-by-side, and dragging the split down the middle allows you to select how much space each app gets onscreen. Combined with the new, streamlined Mission Control, it's now easier than ever to create and manage multiple desktops – which, if used sensibly, make the 12in MacBook capable of some pretty serious multi-tasking.Regardless of what's onscreen, however, image quality is top-notch. Brightness soars to a very respectable 381cd/m2, bright enough to remain legible on sunnier days, and the contrast ratio of 1,063:1 is highly respectable too.


 
 
 

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