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Minggu, 19 Februari 2017

Kabar Gembira! Nokia 3310 Bakalan Dirilis Lagi di Bulan Februari Ini

Kalau hape pertamaku itu pas zaman SD, Saya dikasih hape Nokia 3310 sama orang tua saya. Berasa keren banget data makai have tersebut. Bisa gonta ganti casing pake warna warna, ada yang bening juga lagi.



Banyak yang bilang kalau Nokia 3310 ini handphone yang paling bisa dhandalkan yang pernah ada di dunia ini. Bahkan sampai sekarang, Nokia 3310 tetap jadi legenda hidup yang pernah jaya pada masanya.

Baca Juga Disini :

LUKE SHAW DIAJUKAN UNTUK HENGKANG DARI MANCHESTER UNITED

Dewi Perssik ke Margin Wieheerm: Aku Kayak Lagi Ngaca

Mengagetkan, Gempa Dua Kali Mengguncang Kota Medan dan Sekitarnya Jumat Dini Hari Ini




Yang ane paling inget dari Nokia 3310 adalah... game Space Impact yang jadi andalan gan! Seru banget maen ini game sampe keypad jebol.




Selain game Space Impact, game legendaris khas Nokia adalah Snake!! Game yang cocok banget buat nemenin kalo lagi bosen, sampe akhirnya bosen karena kebanyakan maen game.

Ngaku deh, siapa yang pernah nyoba bikin ringtone pake Nokia? Ane tunjuk tangan gan!! Sampe ngapalin buat beberapa lagu, jadi keren aja gitu ringtone meski masih monoponik tapi udah berbentuk lagu

keren, casingnya bisa digonta ganti dan yang jual casing tuh jaman dulu buanyaaaaaak banget. Dari yang klasik biasa aja, sampe yang warna warni bahkan ada juga yang transparan!

Yang keren, baternya sih awet parah. Maen game, sms, nelpon dsb tapi itu batere tetep segitu-gitu aja. Jempolan emang nih hp. Tapi kalo baterenya udah ngedrop, jangan harap deh



Awalnya dirilis tahun 2000, Nokia 3310 ini bakalan dirilis ulang di tahun 2017 ini gan! Seriusan ini nggak bercanda. Nokia 3310 ini bakalan dirilis oleh HMD Global Oy, pabrik di Finlandia yang punya hak eksklusif buat memasarkan handphone Nokia. Rencananya, bakalan dirilis di Mobile World Congress bulan ini! Harganya? Sekitar USD 73 atau sekitar Rp 970ribu gan.


Selasa, 03 Januari 2017

The Chinese burger designed by Asia's 'best female chef'

The humble steamed bun is taking Hong Kong's culinary scene by storm - and scooping up awards along the way.
May Chow, the owner of restaurant Little Bao, has just been voted Asia's best female chef by a panel of over 300 experts.
The 32-year-old's restaurant serves what she calls Chinese burgers: steamed white buns filled with braised pork belly, fried chicken or fish.
And there are even burgers for dessert, in the form of fried buns sandwiched with ice cream.
Winning the award is no mean feat, considering Asia's competitive food scene, but the restaurant might not have started at all if Ms Chow hadn't sneaked behind her parents' back.

She developed a love of cooking from watching her mother cook in Canada - where a typical meal involved serving more than 20 people in the extended family.
"Growing up I told my parents I wanted to be a chef," Ms Chow tells the BBC.
"But back then, cooking was considered low-class work, and my parents felt it would be a waste of my education."

As a result, Ms Chow studied hotel management at university in the US instead, but says her love for cooking kept calling out to her. By her third year at university, she was ready to take the plunge.
"I didn't tell my parents, but I started interning with restaurants."
That paved her way to becoming a full-time chef at high-end restaurants in Hong Kong.
Her ambition didn't stop at being a chef, either. She says: "The first day I started working at a restaurant, I decided that I wanted to open my own restaurant."
Just a few years later, and after road-testing her dishes at local food markets, Ms Chow opened Little Bao.

'Am I really Chinese?'

Bao means bun in Chinese, and Ms Chow says she drew on her own identity, as a Chinese person who had grown up in North America, when designing her signature dish.
"If you define me, my food is exactly me," she says. "Am I really Chinese? Why do I sound so American?"
"That bao is me - Chinese but understands American culture - putting [the two sides] together in an honest way."
She says she is happiest with the authenticity of her buns when her mother and grandmother enjoy them.
Their approval "comes from 30 years of eating bao - you have to stand up to that quality check".


The dish has also proved a hit with Hong Kong diners and she has just opened a Bangkok branch of Little Bao, as well as a beer bar, Second Draught.
But there were plenty of challenges in the move to becoming a business owner, including the high rents and high build-out costs in Hong Kong.
"It's almost been like taking a real-life business masters degree," she says. "I've grown a lot over the past three years. At first you get emotional, now you just look at things and try to fix problems."
What does she think of being named Asia's best female chef 2017?
It was "stressful", and she jokes that her first reaction, when she learnt of the award, was: "Oh, I don't want it."

There is some pressure that comes with the title, because "there really are not that many female chefs [and] local chefs in that field to be talked about".
She's aware that some will find it strange there is an award specifically for female chefs, but also appreciates how the award has given her a platform to raise awareness about the industry.
She's vocal about what she thinks needs to change to encourage more women, and local Hong Kongers, to join the trade.
Being a chef "is a very labour intensive job. The environment is hot, sticky, typically not a favourable environment."
"Do we really need to work 70 hours a week? Are women allowed to have babies when they're [working] in the kitchen? It's so intense - it's not like a desk job. There are things that need to be improved."

There isn't always "the freedom to dream" in Hong Kong's competitive education system, she adds.
In the past, vocational jobs were seen as jobs for people who couldn't be doctors or lawyers, so there was "no recognition" for jobs in the food and beverage industry.
Still, she argues that the internet, Michelin guides and growing awareness about fine dining has helped, while local chefs are increasingly learning from restaurants abroad.
On a more personal level, she credits her mother with part of her determination to do well in a male-centric field.
"Stereotypical Shanghai women are fierce and loud," she says with a grin.
Her mother's influence, she adds, "let me be bold. I never grew up thinking I had to limit myself".