''' iPHONE *iN* iNDENT '''
STUDENTS : MARIAM & RABO,
so beautiful, two humans, were studying technology, when I first
caught a discreet glimpse, and then through them, I got acquainted
with an iPhone.
Gracious and kind hosts as they
always were, whilst these both Heroes went about making some tea for
me, I quickly took some real envious weighing looks at their iPhones.
A few navigational questions to Rabo's
genius technology bent, I knew here was an *Apple of my Eye*. But
the real question remained, where best to raise the requisite resource
from, in order to buy one. I never could.
I consoled myself, by joining the largest pack of other Heroes : Dee, Sameen, Saima, Hussain, Aqsa, Zainab, Haider, Ali. The majority don't own an iPhone, I admonished myself.
But there's a silver lining to me heartburn. Should the Prime Minister of Pakistan H.E. Mian Nawaz Sharif allows and donates !WOW! some reasonable resource-
I could get the students to invent a ''Virtual Phone''. !WOW!. Any bets?
IN
LIFE AND IN PRACTICE : Always put *humans/ students* First, and
everything else including code second. Most technologists and great
companies do, [as I observed] -
Focus on a
*vulnerability so widespread*, that most begin to act as if it doesn't
exist : Humanity. I say this because very recent research shows that-
*Instagram is the most stress inducing social network*.
After
surveying nearly 1,500 young people/students about their social
media use, the United Kingdom 's Royal Society for Public Health
found that Instagram was the worst platform for their health and well being-
Associated with bullying, sleep loss, body-image issues, anxiety and fear of missing out.
And now, on we go to the The One Device : THE SECRET HISTORY OF THE iPHONE by Brian Merchant.
ALSO WITH BEING SPLASH-, WATER AND DUST-RESISTANT, this beauty of master creation has also seemed very resistant to History,
Brian Merchant also tells the origin stories of the technologies that converged into the iPhone :
.- Gorilla Glass.
.- Motion Sensors.
.- Lithium-ion batteries.
.- ARM chips.
.- Wireless technology and so on.
The iPhone is designed for maximum efficiency and compactness. ''The One Device'' isn't
The three chapters on the development of of the iPhone are the very heart of the book, but there's some filler too.
It's curiously unilluminating to read a metallurgical analysis of a pulverized iPhone, or to watch Merchant trudge around the globe on a kind of a iCalvary in search of the raw materials Apple uses-
Through a Stygian Bolivian tin mine and a lithium mine in the Chilean desert and an e-waste dump in Nairobi where many iPhones end up.
This
kind of hacker tourism can be done well -the goal standard is Neal
Stephenson's epic 1996 Wired article ''Mother Earth- Mother Board''.
His one conspicuous success in this line is his visit to Foxconn factory outside Shenzhen, China, were iPhones are manufactured.
Foxconn
has a reputation for bad labor conditions, and visiting Westerners
are closely chaperoned, but during a trip to the bathroom Merchant
manages to ditch his minders and take a stroll through the vast, dystopian facility.
''It
is factories all the way down,'' he writes, '' a million consumer
electronics being threaded together together in identically drab
monoliths. You feel tiny among them, like a brief spit of organic
matter between aircraft-carrier-size engines of industry.''
It's
a palpable glimpse of the way the iPhone has, like a shiny glossy
virus, physically reshaped the world to produce copies of itself.
Merchant
shows how many people's work went into the creation of the iPhone,
as a counterweight to the ''myth of the lone inventor'' -the notion
that after countless hours of toiling , one man can conjure up an
invention that changes the course of history.''
The
Lone Inventor starts showing his straw stuffing after a couple of
paragraphs, but Merchant spends entire chapters chatting with people
like Mitsuaki.
Oshima
undoubtedly has hidden depths, but as an interviewer Merchant is
powerless to reveal them. ['' Even with the shake of the camera, the
image did not blur, at all. It was too good to be true!'' etc]
Even worse is Merchant's ghastly time-travelling habit.
In
order to talk about magnetometers we first have to sit still for a
history lesson [ compasses have to can be traced back at least as far
back as the Han dynasty, around 206 B.C.]
The
Honour and Serving of the latest ''operational research'' on great
Icon products, Icon companies, and great inventions, continues. Thank
Ya all for reading and sharing forward and see ya on the following one.
With
most respectful dedication to the Technology Research Leaders,
Students, Professors and Teachers of the World. See Ya all on !WOW! -the World Students Society and Twitter-!E-WOW! -the Ecosystem 2011:
''' Slabs & Doodles '''
Good Night and God Bless
SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless
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