sony rolly_
1.索尼产品中有哪些奇葩产品?
2.索尼黑是什么意思
3.高分帮做一个presentation。
4.Sony黑科技,或者Sony手机的详细描述
Sony Rolly SEP-50BT 跳舞机器音乐蛋
容量:2GB
记忆媒体:内建记忆体
支援音乐格式:MP3/AAC/ATRAC
最大储存曲数(ATRAC/MP3):352kbps/188曲、132kbps/500曲、48kbps/1370曲
电池持续时间:约5小时
电源:内置锂电池
充电时间 :USB接?/约5小时、另售充电座使用时/约3小时
外形尺寸:104×65×65(mm)
重量:约300g(包含内建锂电池)
可以设置闹钟,早上用音乐唤醒你...跳舞是这东西的强项.超华丽的东东...
Rolly共有6处可动:⑴支撑卵形机身的转轮部分;⑵扬声器盖⑶盖底部分。⑴~⑶在机身的左右各1,因此总共为6处。此6处各一个,加上另一个识别机身上下左右的,总共有7个3轴加速度传感器。
操作方法大体有两种。分别是手持机身操作和放置在桌上操作。
手持操作时需要把机身竖直,使任意一个扬声器朝上。这时,加速度传感器会识别上下,打开上侧臂。在此状态下,旋转上侧转轮可前进到下一首曲子或返 回上一首曲子,旋转下侧转轮可调节音量。
把机身放在桌上操作时,使“SONY”标志朝前,前后晃动机身可跳转曲目,水平方向旋转可调节音量。Rolly 配备有机身在旋转后不久自动回到原角度的功能。
Rolly左右各配备一个LED。转轮旁边的透明部分,内部LED点亮时,可以从此处观赏灯光。通过红、蓝、绿之间的组合,可表现约700种颜色。
Rolly配合音乐的舞蹈称为“Motion”。Motion有3个播放模式。其中包括:按照用户利用个人电脑软件“Motion Editor”(附赠)编辑的Motion跳舞的“定制Motion功能”;按照Motion Editor自动生成的Motion跳舞的“自动Motion功能”;按照机身对音乐的解析跳舞的“自主Motion功能”。Motion Editor和机身配备的音乐解析功能继承了网络AV产品“NETJUKE”和个人电脑“VAIO”用的“12音解析”。Rolly可解析节奏、速度、 源码进度。
Motion Editor可事先为6处可动位置分别设定动作。还能够设定LED的闪光方式,并通过画面左侧的预览确认。索尼预定于近期开设文件共享服务“RollyMo tionPark”,使用户能够上传自制Motion并下载其他用户制作的Motion。
Rolly的尺寸为104×65×65mm3,重量为300g左右(包括专用锂离子充电电池)。由于Rolly运动剧烈,因此电池收纳部分的盖子用开槽螺钉固定,不易脱落。可插入硬币等旋转使之敞开。
卵形的中央基本为电池槽。电子部件安装在周围。
充电时,无需开盖取出电池,可利用专用摇篮形充电插座充电。
发表前夕,曾有消息称Rolly意在对抗苹果的便携式音乐播放器“iPod”,但Rolly没有耳机插口,虽然可以随身携带,但仍然属于台式播放器。 “iPod和Rolly的使用方法不同。如果说iPod是用于个人欣赏音乐的话,Rolly则是用于朋友们一起观赏歌舞”(索尼公关部)。Rolly开发 小组的主要成员是负责音响的工程师,也有开发“AIBO”的工程师的参与。与音质相比,Rolly更加重视性。播放器使用锂离子电池,有USB电源与直径20MM的扬声器,最大的输出是1.2W+1.2W(满充电的时候)接口USB。终端:miniB/Hi-speed.产品的实体尺寸(幅度×高度×进深)约104×65×65MM(突起部分除去),并有容量包藏内存:1GB。另外可以在10M的距离之内进行通讯。
●藏在盖子地下的是两个喇叭,SONY还标榜「清晰的音质」。
●拿起来将一个侧面朝上时,下面的盖子会盖起来,这时ROLLY的其中一个「轮子」就成为了歌曲选择器。
●放在桌子上的时候推动它(也就是让轮子转)可以换音乐,原地旋转是调音量。
●按下上面的按键,它就会开始随歌曲跳舞。
●ROLLY可以透过USB联机到电脑上,还可以改程控制它的动作。
充满电后它可以播放5个小时的音乐,4个小时的音乐加舞蹈,3个半小时的音乐加舞蹈加蓝牙。
索尼产品中有哪些奇葩产品?
Sony作为一家科技公司,曾经发布过许多创新和独特的产品。以下是一些被认为是「奇葩」的一些产品:
1. 电子宠物狗AIBO:1999年推出,是世界上第一个商用家用机器人宠物狗。它具备各种感知功能和智能行为,能够与人互动。
2. Walkman Bean:2005年推出的一款MP3播放器,其外形类似于蛋糕,具有彩色外壳和豆子形状的按键。
3. Sony Rolly:2007年发布的一款音乐播放器,外形类似于一个鸡蛋,有四个轮子和多个灯光。它可以跳舞、转动和发出声音。
4. Sony Dash:2010年发布的一款智能时钟,具有触摸屏和Wi-Fi功能,可以将电子邮件、气象、新闻等信息显示在屏幕上。
5. Sony FES Watch:2014年推出的一款电子手表,用电子纸技术,可以更改其表带和表盘的设计,使用户能够随时调整其外观。
6. Sony Digital Paper:2013年发布的一款电子纸产品,类似于一块巨大的平板电脑,适用于书写、阅读和批注。
这些产品展示了索尼对科技创新和独特设计的追求,尽管有些产品并没有大规模成功,但它们仍然吸引了一部分用户的兴趣。
索尼黑是什么意思
说到索尼公司的奇葩产品,那就不得不提一件曾经我用过的产品——SmartWatch手表。这是一款在2012年发售的智能手表,全彩触控、各种功能看起来很高大上。当然,最奇葩的地方在于,一款手表居然要和指定的手机连接之后才能显示时间。嗯……那这还算是手表吗?这完全就是搞笑的吧。
高分帮做一个presentation。
索尼黑是索尼公司索尼(日语:ソニー株式会社,英语:Sony Corporation)
主打推崇的一种色调
索尼公司 是日本一家全球知名的大型综合性跨国企业集团。
总部设于日本东京都港区港南1-7-1。
索尼是世界视听、电子游戏、通讯产品和信息技术等领域的先导者,
是世界最早便携式数码产品的开创者,是世界最大的电子产品制造商之一、世界电子游戏业三大巨头之一、
美国好莱坞六大**公司之一。
其旗下品牌有Xperia,Walkman,Sony music,哥伦比亚**公司,PlayStation等
Sony黑科技,或者Sony手机的详细描述
就介绍索尼吧,也不知道你要多长时间的,下面内容很长,不需要的你就砍掉吧:
Genearl Introduction:
Sony Corporation is a Japanese multinational conglomerate corporation and one of the world's largest media conglomerates with revenue of $70.303 billion (as of 2007). Based in Minato, Tokyo, Sony is one of the leading manufacturers of electronics, video, communications, video game consoles and information technology products for the consumer and professional markets, which developed the company into one of the world's richest companies.
Sony Corporation is the electronics business unit and the parent company of the Sony Group, which is engaged in business through its five operating segments — electronics, games, entertainment (motion pictures and music), financial services and other. These make Sony one of the most comprehensive entertainment companies in the world. Sony's principal business operations include Sony Corporation (Sony Electronics in the U.S.), Sony Pictures Entertainment, Sony Computer Entertainment, Sony BMG Music Entertainment, Sony Ericsson and Sony Financial Holdings. As a semiconductor maker, Sony is among the Worldwide Top 20 Semiconductor Sales Leaders. The company's slogan is Sony. Like no other.
History:
In 1945, after World War II, Masaru Ibuka started a radio repair shop in a bombed-out building in Tokyo. The next year, he was joined by his colleague Akio Morita and they founded a company called Tokyo Tsushin Kogyo K.K., which translates in English to Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering Corporation. The company built Japan's first tape recorder called the Type-G.
In the early 1950s, Ibuka treled in the United States and at then heard about Bell Labs' invention of the transistor. He convinced Bell to license the transistor technology to his Japanese company. While most American companies were researching the transistor for its military lications, Ibuka looked to ly it to communications. Although the American companies Regency and Texas Instruments built the first transistor radios, it was Ibuka's company that made them commercially successful for the first time.
In August 1955, Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering released the Sony TR-55, Japan's first commercially produced transistor radio. They followed up in December of the same year by releasing the Sony TR-72, a product that won for both within Japan and in export markets, including Canada, Australia, the Netherlands and Germany. Featuring six transistors, push-pull output and greatly improved sound quality, the TR-72 continued to be a popular seller into the early sixties.
In May 1956, the company released the TR-6, which featured an innovative slim design and sound quality capable of rivaling portable tube radios. It was for the TR-6 that Sony first contracted "Atchan", a cartoon character created by Fuyuhiko Okabe, to become its advertising character. Now known as "Sony Boy", the character first eared in a cartoon ad holding a TR-6 to his ear, but went on to represent the company in ads for a variety of products well into the mid-sixties. The following year, 1957, Tokyo Telecommunications Engineering came out with the TR-63 model, then the smallest (112 × 71 × 32 mm) transistor radio in commercial production. It was a worldwide commercial success.
University of Arizona professor Michael Brian Schiffer, Ph.D., says, "Sony was not first, but its transistor radio was the most successful. The TR-63 of 1957 cracked open the U.S. market and launched the new industry of consumer microelectronics." By the mid 1950s, American s had begun buying portable transistor radios in huge numbers, helping to propel the fledgling industry from an estimated 100,000 units in 1955 to 5,000,000 units by the end of 1968. However, this huge growth in portable transistor radio sales that saw Sony rise to be the dominant player in the consumer electronics field was not because of the consumers who had bought the earlier generation of tube radio consoles, but was driven by a distinctly new American phenomenon at the time called rock and roll.
Origin of name
When Kogyo was looking for a Romanized name to use to market them, they strongly considered using their initials, TTK. The primary reason they did not is that the railway company Tokyo Kyuko was known as TKK. The company occasionally used the acronym "Totsuko" in Japan, but during his visit to the United States, Morita discovered that Americans had trouble pronouncing that name. Another early name that was tried out for a while was "Tokyo Tele-tech" until Morita discovered that there was an American company already using Tele-tech as a brand name.
The name "Sony" was chosen for the brand as a mix of the Latin word Sony or son(us) and also a little boy sonny, which is the root of sonic and sound as well as familiar word of everybody called a boy in February 1955, and company name changed to Sony in January 1958. Morita pushed for a word that does not exist in any language so that they could claim the word "Sony" as their own (which paid off when they successfully sued a candy producer using the name, who claimed that "Sony" was an existing word in some language).
At the time of the change, it was extremely unusual for a Japanese company to use Roman letters instead of kanji to spell its name. The move was not without opposition: TTK's principal bank at the time, Mitsui, had strong feelings about the name. They pushed for a name such as Sony Electronic Industries, or Sony Tele-tech. Akio Morita was firm, however, as he did not want the company name tied to any particular industry. Eventually, both Ibuka and Mitsui Bank's chairman ge their roval
Notable Sony products, technologies and proprietary formats
Sony has historically been notable for creating its own in-house standards for new recording and storage technologies instead of adopting those of other manufacturers and standards bodies. The most infamous of these was the videotape format war of the early 1980s, when Sony marketed the Betamax system for video cassette recorders against the VHS format developed by JVC. In the end, VHS gained critical mass in the marketplace and became the worldwide standard for consumer VCRs and Sony adopted the format. While Betamax is for all practical purposes an obsolete format, a professional-oriented component video format called Betacam that was derived from Betamax is still used today, especially in the film and television industry.
Early Sony products included reel-to-reel tape recorders and transistor radios.
A Sony VCR
In 1968 Sony introduced the Trinitron brand name for its line of aperture grille cathode ray tube televisions and (later) computer monitors. Trinitron displays are still produced, but only for markets like India and China. Sony discontinued the last Trinitron-based television set in the USA Spring of 2007. Trinitron computer monitors were discontinued in 2005.
Sony launched the Betamax videocassette recording format in 15. In 19 the Walkman brand was introduced, in the form of the world's first portable music player.
1982 saw the launch of Sony's professional Betacam videotape format and the collaborative Compact Disc format. In 1983 Sony introduced 90mm micro diskettes (better known as 3.5-inch floppy disks), which it had developed at a time when there were 4" floppy disks and a lot of variations from different companies to replace the then on-going 5.25" floppy disks. Sony had great success and the format became dominant; 3.5" floppy disks gradually became obsolete as they were replaced by current media formats. In 1983 Sony launched the MSX, a home computer system, and introduced the world (with their counterpart Philips) to the Compact Disc or CD. In Sony launched the Discman series which extended their Walkman brand to portable CD products. In 1985 Sony launched their Handycam products and the Video8 format. Video8 and the follow-on hi-band Hi-8 format became popular in the consumer camcorder market. In 1987 Sony launched the 4mm DAT or Digital Audio Tape as a new digital audio tape standard.
In addition to developing consumer-based recording media, after the launch of the CD Sony began development of commercially based recording media. In 1986 they launched Write-Once optical discs (WO) and in 1988 launched Magneto-optical discs which were around 125MB size for the specific use of archival data storage.
In the early 1990s two high-density optical storage standards were being developed: one was the MultiMedia Compact Disc (MMCD), backed by Philips and Sony, and the other was the Super Density disc (SD), supported by Toshiba and many others. Philips and Sony abandoned their MMCD format and agreed upon Toshiba's SD format with only one modification based on MMCD technology, viz EFMPlus. The unified disc format was called DVD which was marketed in 19.
Sony Discman
Sony introduced the MiniDisc format in 1993 as an alternative to Philips DCC or Digital Compact Cassette. Since the introduction of MiniDisc, Sony has attempted to promote its own audio compression technologies under the ATRAC brand, against the more widely used MP3. Until late 2004, Sony's Network Walkman line of digital portable music players did not support the MP3 de facto standard natively, although the provided software SonicStage would convert MP3 files into the ATRAC or ATRAC3 formats.
In 1993, Sony challenged the industry standard Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound format with a newer and more advanced proprietary motion picture digital audio format called SDDS (Sony Dynamic Digital Sound). This format employed eight channels (7.1) of audio opposed to just six used in Dolby Digital 5.1 at the time. Unlike Dolby Digital, SDDS utilized a method of backup by hing mirrored arrays of bits on both sides of the film which acted as a measure of reliability in case the film was partially damaged. Ultimately, SDDS has been vastly overshadowed by the preferred DTS (Digital Theatre System) and Dolby Digital standards in the motion picture industry. SDDS was solely developed for use in the theatre circuit; Sony never intended to develop a home theatre version of SDDS.
In 1998, Sony launched their Memory Stick format; flash memory cards for use in Sony lines of digital cameras and portable music players. It has seen little support outside of Sony's own products with Secure Digital (SD) cards commanding considerably greater popularity. Sony has made updates to the Memory Stick format with Memory Stick Duo and Memory Stick Micro.
Sony and Philips jointly developed the Sony-Philips digital interface format (S/PDIF) and the high-fidelity audio system SACD. The latter has since been entrenched in a format war with DVD-Audio. At present, neither has gained a major foothold with the general public. CDs are preferred by consumers because of their ubiquitous presence in consumer devices.
The PlayStation 2 (PS2)
In 1994 Sony launched the PlayStation (later PS one). This successful console was succeeded by the PlayStation 2 in 2000, itself succeeded by the PlayStation 3 in 2006. The PlayStation brand was extended to the portable games market in 2005 by the PlayStation Portable. Sony developed the Universal Media Disc (UMD) optical disc medium for use on the PlayStation Portable. Although Sony tried to push the UMD format for movies, major studios stopped supporting the format in the Spring of 2006.
In 2004, Sony built upon the MiniDisc format by releasing Hi-MD. Hi-MD allows the playback and recording of audio on newly-introduced 1GB Hi-MD discs in addition to playback and recording on regular MiniDiscs. Recordings on the Hi-MD Walkmans can be transferred to and from the computer virtually unrestricted, unlike earlier NetMD. In addition to sing audio on the discs, Hi-MD allows the storage of computer files such as documents, videos and photos. Hi-MD introduced the ability to record CD-quality audio with a linear PCM recording feature. It was the first time since MiniDisc's introduction in 1992 that the ATRAC codec could be bypassed and lossless CD-quality audio could be recorded on the small discs.
Sony is currently touting the Blu-ray Disc optical disc format, which competed with Toshiba's HD DVD. As of quarter three of 2007, Blu-ray Disc had the backing of every major motion picture studio except Universal, Paramount and Dreamworks.. Since then, Blu-Ray has ended up as the dominant HD media format, with Toshiba announcing their defeat, and plans to stop supporting HD DVD on the 19th of February 2008. In December 2006 Sony debuted their first Blu-ray player, the Sony BDP-S1 with an MSRP of US $999.95.
On September 10, 2007 Sony unveiled Rolly (Sony), an egg-shaped digital robotic music player which has colour lights that flash as it “dances” and has fling wings that can twist to its tunes. Movements along with the music downloaded from personal computers and Bluetooth can be set. Rolly, which will go on sale in Japan on September 29, 2007, has one gigabyte of memory to store tunes. Sony also developed dog-shaped robots called Aibo and humanoids and Qrio
最直观的就是“黑”指黑色,在索尼的产品线中,黑色一直是主打色调。当然应该这不是本意。
索尼向来以突破创意极限,大胆将现代科技融入到极富创意的外型或是用途当中去。比如神奇的机器狗 AIBO 、蛋状并可以滚动的数字音乐播放器 Rolly、超便携掌上电脑 VAIO UX 等等。索尼敢第一个吃螃蟹的创新精神,被网友称作“黑科技”。
索尼的手机最大的特点就是做工精良、外观时尚,它的手机往往在外形上与其他手机区别很大,十分有创意,从以前的索爱就可以看出来,外观十分漂亮,而且做工也很细致,可以这样说,论手机外观和做工的话,它不比苹果差,这也是以索尼手机的特长。
在说说手机内在的,索尼手机优化还是很不错的,当然看你怎么用了,如果你拿它做一些和你手机配置相差太远的事情,那就另当别论了,索尼的ui很简洁,但又不失风格,体统优化地很好,而且它另一个最大的特点--照相,也在它的手机上充分的体现了出来,苹果三星都是用的它的镜头,背照式也是索尼的技术。索尼的屏幕也很棒,也是用了索尼液晶电视的技术,显示效果很好。
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