SA43 Pod, Pad … Pud

Dulu iPod, kini iPad dan dijangka akan datang iPud (Physically-strapped utility devices). Masing-masing sedang mendapatkannya … Oh tak lagi! kat Malaysia. Orang Malaysia cool tak hot (atau terburu-buru).

Yang hendak ditegur … Pud yang ada sekarang (akal, minda dan setara dengannya) tak guna sepenuhnya lagi pun!

5 Responses to SA43 Pod, Pad … Pud

  1. Pak Din 31 berkata:

    By DAISUKE WAKABAYASHI

    TOKYO—The debut of Apple Inc.’s iPad tablet computer in Japan is generating a level of hype and excitement rarely seen these days for a new electronics product in this gadget-loving nation, underscoring the paucity of buzz-worthy, homegrown devices.

    The iPad Hype

    View Slideshow

    AFP/Getty Images
    Kazuki Miura, right, a 38-year-old freelance writer, was the first person in line at the flagship store of Softbank, the iPad’s exclusive Japanese wireless carrier Friday.

    The steady decline of Japan’s electronics industry, once considered the birthplace for must-have gadgets, has accelerated in recent years as consumer electronics newcomers such as Apple, Amazon.com Inc. and Vizio Inc. have moved in on the turf with more innovative or cheaper versions of products first developed in Japan.

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703630304575269921800507634.html?mod=WSJ_hp_us_mostpop_read

  2. Pak Din 31 berkata:

    Planning a vacation in the near future? Be ready to share an airplane ride with a few preening iPad owners, writes BOB TEDESCHI
    I HAVEN’T had the chance to test the iPad while vacationing, but after two weeks of testing it on a virtual vacation — a multi-continent jaunt through backwoods, beach and city — here’s my verdict: if you have an extra US$500 (RM1,600) to US$700 to spend on one, plus another US$100 for some great apps, it’s worth the plunge.
    And now the caveat.

    You will adore the iPad when in transit and in the hotel room.

    Read more: Tech: Testing iPad’s trip-worthiness http://www.nst.com.my/nst/articles/TestingiPad__8217_strip-worthiness/Article/#ixzz0pXDLgK3n

  3. naz berkata:

    salam pak din. resah jugak tengok dunia sekarang, macam nabi cakap umat akhir zaman ni ditimpa penyakit wahnu. mungkin tokyo maju dalam teknologi ni sebab diorang dah terlalu ikut dunia dah kot atau umat Islam yang ketinggalan dalam mempekasakan diri kerana masalah sosial dan keruntuhan institusi keluarga. Wallahu ‘alam. camna ya pakcik din. takut jugak kami para remaja yang nak kembara di dunia ni? :’(

    • Pak Din 31 berkata:

      Dah di Tokyo atau Moscow atau Kaherah ke ni? Atau masih menunggu surat tawaran! Apapun sedia payung dan pastikan payung sintetik formula yang terbaik, untuk hujan emas di negeri orang yang selalu mengaburi mata pelajar kita.

      Pakcik dulu 10 orang menjadi peneroka di Darlington, UK. Hampir 4 bulan duduk bersama Tok Arab baik dan bernasib baik kesemua 10 mempunyai payung kelas satu. Kalau tidak pasti hancur ditelan kebebasan di sana dengan, walaupun tak begitu banyak, wang saku 200 pound itu cukup mencabar untuk ke mana dibelanjakan.

      Remaja dahulu atau sekarang, punya set of problems tersendiri, yang memerlukan set of solution yang agak berbeza. Apa yang Pc lihat, dan yang penting untuk disentuh, tidak banayk perubahan kepada kefahaman hubungan Sunnatullah dengna Ilmu Sains, dahulu dan sekarang, walupun remaja sekara sudah ramai didedahkan kepada sains.

      Minat mengkajinya …

  4. Pak Din 31 berkata:

    The iPhone, which was officially launched on the mainland last October, more than two years after its debut in the US, costs between $588 – $740 while an iPod Touch is around $235. The Apple Peel sells for $57.
    Analysts said a thriving gray market flooded with fake iPhones smuggled in from Hong Kong and the West has hurt legitimate sales of the Apple smart phone here.
    The illegitimate phones are usually cheaper and contain functions, such as wireless Internet, that are not available on phones sold through legal channels.
    “All of the potential users already had purchased an iPhone, they had found a way to buy one,” Leo Wang, founder of Mobile 2.0 forum, a telecom and mobile organization, told CNN after the China launch of iPhone release last year. “The official iPhone is too expensive.”

    http://edition.cnn.com/2010/TECH/mobile/08/16/china.apple.peel/index.html?hpt=C1#fbid=DbI88YPYPgq&wom=false

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