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Sunday Symposium

By The Minimalists

A simple gathering for simple people. Join The Minimalists for our upcoming Sunday Symposiums in Southern California. Tickets are free thanks to the kind people at Earthing. Register soon because seats are limited:

Los Angeles – Dec 28 (free tickets)

Each event includes free coffee, a sound bath, a talk from The Minimalists, an audience Q&A, and more. Together we’re creating a loving, dogma-free community—and we’d like you to be a part of it. All beliefs and non-beliefs are welcome. All ages. Free hugs!

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JFM’s Favorite Albums of 2024

By Joshua Fields Millburn

Each year since we started The Minimalists, I’ve catalogued my favorite albums at the end of the calendar year. This one is a few months late, but better late than never. Here are my favorites from 2024. (You can find previous years here.)

1. Donovan Woods, Things Were Never Good If They’re Not Good Now

2. Joshua Hyslop, Evergold

3. Soccer Mommy, Evergreen

4. Mat Kearney, Mat Kearney

5. Slow Runner, Yesterday Don’t Fail Me Now

6. Kendrick Lamar, GNX

7. Aquilo, You Should Get Some Sleep

8. PARTYNEXTDOOR, P4

9. Jeffrey Focault, The Universal Fire

10. Maggie Rogers, Don’t Forget Me

11. Childish Gambino, Atavista

12. Future & Metro Boomin, We Still Don’t Trust You

Honorable Mentions: Vory, Roy Woods, Khalid, Lee DeWyze, Mustafa, tendai, Snow Patrol, Michael Flynn, mike., Peter Bradley Adams, Novo Amor, Local Natives, Dua Lipa, ScHoolboy Q, mgk & Trippie Redd, Andrew Belle, Two Lanes, Kevin Gates, ¥$.

What was your favorite album this year?
Let me know via DM on Instagram.

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Promises

By T.K. Coleman

Promises are tricky things.

If they were coins, they’d have two sides: making them and keeping them.

Making them is convenient.

A promise like I’ll donate what I don’t use can make accumulating things feel charitable.
A promise like I’ll organize all this when life slows down can make procrastination look like patience.
A promise like I vow to never do that again can sound like redemption.
A promise like We’ll take that vacation soon can buy hope, even if the calendar never changes.
A promise like I’ll pay later with interest can open doors that cash can’t.

Yes, making promises is convenient. But keeping them is costly.

The convenience of a promise is balanced by the cost of delivery—or the consequences of disappointment.

Delivery requires effort and sacrifice. It isn’t measured by what we say, but by what we do.

Disappointment erodes trust. When promises pile up without action, the entire coin loses its value.

Ask anyone who’s waited for a call that never came.
Or circled a date on the calendar for a trip that never happened.
Or worse—anyone who stopped believing in themselves because of vows broken to their own soul.

The point isn’t to make more promises. It isn’t even just to keep the ones we make. It’s to learn how to make promises that we can—and truly want to—keep.

Before you make your next promise, ask:

Am I making this promise to avoid conflict?
Do my promises reflect my values—or other people’s expectations?
Is a promise the best way to solve this problem—or to create this result?
Could I create the experience I want without making a promise at all?
And if a promise is truly necessary … am I prepared to pay the price of keeping it?

Anyone can mint promises. Fewer can spend them wisely.

Struggling with emotional, physical, or mental clutter? Book a Clutter Counseling session with T.K. Coleman.

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The Perfect Closet

By Joshua Fields Millburn

The perfect closet exists, but it is not located on the other side of your next purchase.

According to the Public Interest Research Group, the average American buys 53 new articles of clothing each year. That’s more than one new thing per week and four times as much as in the year 2000. Accordingly, garment manufacturers are now producing more than 100 billion pieces every year.

It’s easy to blame fast fashion for our overconsumption. Indeed, rapacious corporate greed is a part of the problem. But companies are ceaselessly churning out new attire only because we shoppers keep demanding more.

Just like everyone else, you and I yearn to be trendy. When you think about it, though, trendy is just marketing jargon that really means “soon to go out of style.”

Next time you look in the mirror, consider doing more than a ‘fit check. Consider being honest with yourself about those misplaced desires and insecurities that lead to discontent and debt and piles of cheap clothes, not a perfect closet.

As a recovering perfectionist, I know it feels like that new belt, those new shoes, that new dress will scratch your consumer itch. After all, you’re just a few outfits away from a flawless closet, right?

No.

You see, the word perfect comes from the Latin word perficere, which breaks down into per- (“completely”) and facere (“do”). In other words, perfect does not mean flawless; it means completely done.

Thus, the key to a perfect closet is not addition—it is subtraction.

The wardrobe you want won’t be crafted by acquiring more costumes. (How many years have you been sold that lie?) No, perfect is uncovered when you jettison the clutter that incompleted your closet in the first place.

So, instead of buying a new item every week, just like your fellow trendsetters, what would happen if you let go of ten old items this week?

You can start with anything you haven’t worn in the last year. Soon, you will find yourself donating everything you haven’t worn in the last 90 days.

In the end, with all the excess out of the way, all that remains are your favorite clothes. Perfect was hiding in your closet this whole time. No purchase necessary.

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Everything Is Final

By The Minimalists

The tenth anniversary edition of our #1 bestselling book, Everything That Remains, enhanced with a beautiful new cover, is now available in paperback, ebook, and audiobook formats.

Synopsis

What if everything you ever wanted isn’t what you actually want? Twenty-something, suit-clad, and upwardly mobile, Joshua Fields Millburn thought he had everything anyone could ever want. Until he didn’t anymore.

Blindsided by the loss of his mother and his marriage in the same month, Millburn started questioning every aspect of the life he had built for himself.

Then, he accidentally discovered a lifestyle known as minimalism … and everything started to change.

In the pursuit of looking for something more substantial than compulsory consumption and the broken American Dream, Millburn jettisoned most of his material possessions, paid off loads of crippling debt, and walked away from his six-figure career.

So, when everything was gone, what was left? Everything That Remains is the touching, surprising story of what happened when one young man decided to let go of everything and begin living more deliberately. Heartrending, uplifting, and deeply personal, this engrossing memoir is peppered with insightful (and often hilarious) interruptions by Ryan Nicodemus, Millburn’s best friend of twenty years.

Available formats: Paperback · Kindle · Audiobook

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Letting Go in Advance

By Joshua Fields Millburn

Clothing clutter accumulates at the checkout line, well before it overflows your closets, hampers, and dresser drawers.

According to the EPA, the average American throws out more than 81 pounds of clothing each year, even though 95% of it could be reused or recycled.

Sounds like we are burdened by the residue of regret.
Sounds like we own more than enough.
Sounds like we don’t need more.

Yet we keep buying more: more shirts and pants and belts and shoes and dresses and shorts and jackets and wallets and purses and accessories, 85% of which will soon occupy space in a landfill.

Why are we so addicted to purchasing new clothes that will shortly become trash?

The answer involves many factors—false promises from marketers, slights of hand from advertisers, unconscious peer pressure from friends and coworkers—but the core characteristic of our overconsumption is consumerism.

Consumerism is the ideology that externalities will complete you—that buying more will somehow make your life more complete.

We believe this nonsense only because we don’t understand what enough is. So we accumulate more than enough, hoping that eventually we’ll get to the point at which our wardrobes, and thus our lives, are perfect.

And yet it doesn’t work.
Consumerism can’t complete you.
Because you are already complete.

Even when you’re standing alone in an empty closet,
dressed in the simplest attire,
you are complete.

Think about it.

Have you ever looked at a newborn and said,
This baby is incomplete
so I better buy her a bunch of new things
to perfect that imperfect little child?

Of course not.

So…

If you were complete when you were born—
when you owned zero possessions—
then at what point did you become incomplete?

You became incomplete
the moment your consumer culture
convinced you to burn yourself
with the flame of consumerism.

Thankfully, that fire
can be extinguished by
the gentle waters of simplicity.

Be it clothes, cars, or commodities, no material possession will complete you or make you happy, even though it feels like they can when you’re steeped in a retail frenzy. If anything, excess possessions cover up your happiness, which means, in a real way, new purchases don’t complete you—they incomplete you!

However, a complete life does exist—it exists on the other side of letting go, letting go of the past by donating and recycling the waste, and then letting go of the future by letting go of the stuff in advance.

You see, the simplest way to get rid of an item is to avoid bringing it home in the first place.

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中国2025社会热点大事记

2025年中国网络社会热点大事:1.山西大同“订婚强奸案”;2.屏山县纺织厂纵火案;3.甘肃天水幼儿铅中毒事件;4.南京阿红事件;5.杭州自来水污染事件;6.江油未成年人霸凌事件;7.罗永浩吐槽西贝预制菜事件;8.于朦胧坠楼案;9.户晨风被封;10.香港宏福苑大火。

4月16日——山西大同“订婚强奸案”

4月16日,大同中院对“订婚强奸案”进行二审宣判:裁定驳回上诉,维持原判。5月14日,山西大同“订婚强奸案”被列入最高人民法院发布的指导性案例或典型案例库。大同“订婚强奸案”指2023年发生于山西大同的一起引发广泛社会关注的刑事案件。男方席某某与女方经媒人介绍订婚,男方家庭支付部分彩礼后,双方举行订婚仪式。事后,女方指控男方在订婚宴后强行与其发生性关系,男方因此被以强奸罪逮捕和起诉。案件审理中,男方辩称双方属婚内行为,但法院一审认定强奸罪成立,判处其有期徒刑三年。

5月20日——屏山县纺织厂纵火案

5月20日,四川省宜宾市屏山县经济开发区发生一起人为纵火案件,犯罪嫌疑人文某(男,27岁)在四川锦裕纺织有限公司车间纵火并刺伤一名财务人员,引发广泛社会关注。由于车间内堆放大量棉纺物,火势迅速蔓延,消防部门经过数小时扑救才控制住火情。案发后,网络流传“文某因800元工资被克扣而纵火”的说法。屏山县公安局表示该说法不实,文某的工资已按合同结算,其行为系个人心理问题导致。

7月1日——甘肃天水幼儿铅中毒事件

7月1日,甘肃天水麦积区褐石培心幼儿园因违规使用添加剂,导致上百名幼儿血铅异常甚至中毒的事件引发全国关注。官方通报称,事件原因是幼儿园提供的三色枣发糕、玉米肠卷等食品中的添加剂超标。期间,因天水当地检测结果与幼儿在西安、上海等地异地就医检测结果差异悬殊、天水过往曾发生同类铅中毒事件等因素,引发争议与疑虑。

7月6日——南京阿红事件

7月6日,南京警方以传播淫秽物品罪,逮捕嫌疑人焦某某(化名“阿红”,男,38岁)。焦某某长期男扮女装利用网络聊天工具诱骗多名男性发生性关系,并偷拍自己与这些男性的性爱影片贩售牟利。据媒体报导,焦某某的外貌平庸,身材也无突出之处,却能吸引不同男性上门,来访者中不乏年轻白领、健身教练、外卖小哥、大学生等各式各样人物,以及外国人也是来访者之列。阿红被网民称为“红姐”、“红老头”、“红大爷”、“小红叔”,由于情节太过猎奇,成为全网的火爆话题。

7月16日——杭州自来水污染事件

2025年7月16日上午起,浙江省杭州市余杭区有大量居民反映自来水出现恶臭、变色、充斥深色沉淀物等现象,部分居民表示身体不适,同时引发饮用水抢购潮[。该区的水务公司“余杭水务控股集团”7月16日深夜公告确认事件,称波及仁和与良渚两个“街道”。该公司至7月17日下午4时再发公告,称“水质经检测已恢复”,并就事件致歉,承诺每户减免5吨水费作为补偿。不过,直到7月18日近中午仍有居民反映自来水发黄。

7月22日——江油未成年人霸凌事件

7月22日,四川省江油市发生未成年人霸凌案,在一座废弃楼房内,受害者(14岁赖姓女子)被三名施暴者(15岁刘姓女子、13岁刘姓女子和14岁彭姓女子)持续辱骂、威胁和殴打。三人先逼她脱下衣服、靠墙站立,再对其拿长棍抽打、扯头发、轮番掌掴,最后又强迫受害者下跪,并踢踹其背部。相关视频在网络流传后,随即引发公愤。8月4日,江油市公安局发布警情通报,并公开案件的调查结果及处置措施。通报称,案件起因为15岁刘姓女子与受害者“发生矛盾”,而受害者被殴打后,头皮、双膝等多处挫伤,经鉴定为“轻微伤”。通报还称:警方已对受害人及家属进行及时慰问与心理疏导,15岁刘姓女子与14岁彭姓女子亦被治安处罚。通报结尾处,警方呼吁“为避免给受害人及其家属造成二次伤害,请勿传播相关视频信息”。

9月10日——罗永浩吐槽西贝预制菜事件

9月10日,罗永浩在微博上发文称西贝餐饮“几乎全都是预制菜”,这一说法引发网友广泛关注与讨论,“罗永浩吐槽西贝”相关内容登上热搜,翌日西贝创始人、董事长贾国龙在新闻发布会上表示“西贝不是预制菜”,并宣布推出“罗永浩菜单”,并开放全国门店后厨给大众参观,并扬言要起诉罗永浩。受到舆论风波的影响,西贝餐饮自9月10日起的营业额出现连续下降,9月12日起每日的营业额预计减少200—300万元。9月14日晚,贾国龙在微信称罗永浩是“网络黑嘴、网络黑社会”。9月15日中午,西贝官方发布了书面致歉信。罗永浩表示决定放弃追究西贝。

9月11日——于朦胧坠楼案

9月11日,中国大陆男艺人于朦胧在北京市朝阳区的一栋住宅大楼坠落身亡,终年37岁,于朦胧工作室同日傍晚证实死讯。事件引发广泛关注,网上出现各种难以查核的传言。

9月17日——户晨风被封

9月17日,“户晨风被封”话题登上微博热搜。9月20日,户晨风的抖音、哔哩哔哩、微博、小红书账号被正式封禁,同时所有作品与动态被移除,9月30日浙江省委宣传部微信公众号“浙江宣传”发文批判其言论指其通过制造对立、煽动情绪来吸引流量,对户晨风的封禁升级,其各大平台账号消失。

户晨风是中国一名网络红人、主播,以随机给陌生人钱并采访他们、测试购买力的视频而走红。在直播中,他常常会与网友聊时事,或就一些观点激烈辩论。其直播内容和视频创作在中国互联网上多次引发争议,相关账号也数次被封禁。

11月26日——香港宏福苑大火

11月26日,香港新界大埔区宏福苑发生五级火警。这场火警是香港首宗屋苑五级火警,也是香港回归以来第二宗五级火警。火灾造成至少160人死亡(包括1名殉职消防员)、79人受伤,6人失踪。火灾发生前,宏福苑正进行维修工程,各座住宅外围搭建了竹制脚手架和防尘护网,玻璃窗几乎全被发泡胶封闭。11月26日下午2时51分,其中一座建筑外的防护网起火,火势迅速蔓延至该屋苑8座大厦中的7座。初步调查显示,维修工程中封闭窗户所用的发泡胶属高度易燃物,加上使用未达阻燃测试标准的保护网,使火势迅速蔓延至室内外。

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喂马劈柴:偶遇镇江:西津渡+宝华山

镇江之行的记录本来应该一鼓作气写完,结果写了金山寺之后懒虫上身,草草给《偶遇镇江》加了个副标题先发出去,想着回头尽快将后续补上,谁知一拖就是一个月。不管怎样,今天还是强打精神补全行程记录。不过时间久了…

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疏影横斜:今冬的第一场雪

周一的时候天气预报就说周五会有大雪,不过后来两天天气预报又显示为中雪,那是就想,这雪会不会根本就下不下来?因为以前也有过这种情况,天气预报说了好多天,各种自媒体都在发文迎接下雪,结果根本没有下,以至后来有人开玩笑打赌说,如果会下雪,就把中州大道舔干净(也有打赌说去裸奔的)。结果今天早上醒来,就发现外面有一层薄薄的雪,看来这次天气预报诚不欺人也。 上午的时候雪很小,还时断时续的。但中午过后,雪渐渐的变大了。不过下的不是那种片状的大雪片,而是小的雪疙瘩,风吹着雪打在脸上生疼。不过不论怎样,总算下雪了。 因为是第一场雪,气温也是从昨天开始突降的,地面都没有冻透,地上的余温还有,所以雪落在路上大部分都化了,机动车道上因为车轮的碾压和汽车尾气的加热,基本上没有什么积雪,人行道上和草坪绿地上有不少的积雪,给冬天增加了不少的氛围。 这是昨天晚上留下的积雪 公园里的棕榈树 这应该是杏树吧 这棵树显得很有张力 垃圾桶上的积雪 这是上午,雪还没开始下大 草地上已经覆盖满了

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陈锐同学:山水一程

时间挺快,这一周终于到了周五。密密麻麻的事情,有些随着时间已经消灭了,有些已经不需要再做了,不管如何,都过了过了,奈何感冒还是比较顽固,还会咳咳咳,尬。前几天突然在想一句话,看山是山,看水是水。之前总是看山不是山,看水不是水,融入了自己的认知和思绪,其实看山山水水都是在看自己而已,都是自己的一层投射,而山还是山,水还是水。 金刚经云:凡所有相,皆是虚妄;若见诸相非相,即见如来。走在成都街头,川剧脸谱矗立面前,人们同一张脸上面绘制不同的色彩,便成为了脸谱。瞧,每一张脸谱都能够给我们带来不一样的情绪体验。或许,这就是相,这就是山水不变的情况下,融入了我们内在固有的那个认知,便着了相。今天去西昌参与会议,2025年第二次去这座城市,一座有山有水的城市,走起。

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郝海龍:逆行的时间与顺流的语音:倪匡《双程》读后

为了纪念自己第一次成功使用语音输入创作长文,我特意阅读了倪匡1996年创作的卫斯理系列小说《双程》。 《双程》是倪匡第一部使用声控电脑完成的作品。据说当年他完成手稿后,第一时间便交予叶李华老师阅读,并问了他一个问题:这部小说和之前的小说风格上有什么差异? 叶李华老师算是倪匡先生的头号书迷,更是卫斯理系列的「活字典」。卫斯理系列洋洋洒洒一百多部,写到后期,倪匡自己常记不清前情旧事。为免自相矛盾,经常需要确认人物在之前做过什么,这时他就会致电叶李华老师询问。叶李华老师总是对答如流,也难怪倪匡会授权他去撰写《卫斯理回忆录》。 换句话说,叶李华是一个比「卫斯理本人」(倪匡)更熟悉卫斯理的人。据他自己说,读完《双程》之后,并未感觉其与同系列前作有什么风格上的差异。 听到这个答案,倪匡如释重负,终于可以确认,自己的创作水准并没有因为从手写转为语音输入而打折。。 但在我阅读的过程中,却能明显感觉到小说前面的文字有一些磕磕绊绊,不过越往后写越顺,从中段开始,笔力基本已经恢复到了往日水准。简单来说,这本小说后半段要比前半段好看。 不过,大家普遍认为倪匡后期作品不如前期作品好看,我也有同感。但我觉得这恰恰源于倪匡独特的写作风格。他的很多作品的设定新奇,一些原创设定甚至远早于很多西方科幻小说,行文用的又是大白话,在我们年轻时那个被强制灌输名著的年代,读起来格外轻松,极易让人着迷。 然而,或许是因为教育背景使然,他的小说有明显的明清笔记小说的色彩:短小精悍,却也也意味着缺少细节,有时候读起来,更像在读一份现代小说的详细大纲。所以随着人生阅历的丰富和阅读量的提升,再回头看,难免会觉得他后期的作品有些单薄无味。 (以下内容涉及剧透) 不过,若单纯看设定,《双程》依然是一部极具趣味的作品。 故事围绕着一个奇特的聋哑人展开,其生命形态与绝大多数人截然不同。常人的时间是从过去向未来单向流动的线性过程,而这个...

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JiaYin:深秋灵隐

11月底的时候,新加坡朋友来上海玩,想去杭州灵隐寺一游,于是我陪他们一同坐高铁前往。灵隐每年都去,但都是每年春天,深秋的灵隐倒是第一次见,和春天却有不同,那天天气特别好,阳光温暖,拍了几张照片,很是喜欢。12月1日灵隐寺和飞来峰景区开始免票了,算是最后一次付费逛灵隐吧。

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花開未央:Annecy:阿尔卑斯的小威尼斯

阿讷西老城(La Vieille Ville d’Annecy),第一次走进去,小雪脑海里蹦出的形容词只有一个:这地方,也太有故事感了吧。被称为“阿尔卑斯的小威尼斯”,其实不是浪得虚名,而是你真的会被那些橙红色、粉芒色、薄荷绿的立面包围,淹没在河道、水光、石板路交织出的立体时空里。 但这座城市的时间线比你以为的更深。湖底新石器时代村落、罗马帝国的城市规划、日内瓦伯爵与萨伏依王朝、中世纪的大火、反宗教改革的宗教战线1——所有宏大的历史事件,在阿讷西老城里都找得到痕迹,只是你在走过那些窄窄街道时,可能只会以为,是老城的壁面特别斑驳,阳光特别柔和。 从阿讷西城堡(Château d’Annecy)旁的小路就可以进入老城。Google 地图直接导航到阿讷西城堡,旁边就有个停车场,很方便。只是,停车位难求到一个让人怀疑人生的程度,甚至有种“等你停好车,我都逛完了”的荒谬感。 从城堡一路往老城走的那段路,小雪特别喜欢。安静的居民住宅、陡坡、石板阶梯、突然涌起的人潮与市集喧嚣——像是从风景摄影切换到纪录片,再切到旅游实境节目,节奏自然又顺。不知为何,还有点像西式的凤凰古城,好像往下走两步就又能再次拍到死党的肩。 蒂乌河(Thiou River)2在老城里像一条主动脉,切出运河、桥樑、水边窗景,也带动曾经的磨坊、印刷业与锻造厂。老城的街巷没有棋盘式规划,全都顺着水、顺着山势自然生成,也因此处处是转角惊喜。从阿讷西城堡观景台往下看,老城密集的屋顶与颜色像是铺在山下的一块拼布。 只是蒂乌河的河水浅到让小雪愣住。是枯水季的关系吗?Mari在旁边碎念着气候变迁导致的长期干旱趋势使得阿讷西湖夏季水位偏低,好好的风景就这么变调了。小雪一边听一边想:世界末日快来吧,人类太蠢了,不值得这麽折腾。 La Vieille Ville d’Annecy 圣皮埃尔主教座堂(Cathédrale Saint-Pie...

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织梦岁月:潮汕五日(三日)游

上月底,我们公司里业务员门和我们固岗,分二批去潮汕玩,这次我是第一批,因为从23号出发,回来是27号,而我28-29刚好有亲戚家婚宴。为啥已经过去了那么久才记录呢?原因有两个,一是我拖拉,一直没动。二是标题我已经在回来的那一天写了,一直在我草稿箱里。 这次行程来回动车,和以往的双飞不一样,这次可能的原因是,我们园区里也是一家集团公司,出去玩是双动车,整个费用也低,老板提了一下,我们下面的人肯定直接就这样安排了啦。以前公司安排出去的,有过凌晨坐车去机场,这次起床很正常,我是早晨5:30起床,吃完早饭,6:10到达大巴所在地,点人,上车出发,8点多的动车。 坐车长时间真是累啊,整整八个小时,在上面太难熬了,之前我们去青岛的时候,也是坐了那么久,简直给我留下心理阴影了呢。不过我下载了电视剧《以家人之名》看,以分散下注意力。我们这里是穿毛衣和外套的,车越往南开越热,加上刚开始动车里没开空调,大家都脱得只剩下一件不能再脱为止。中饭也是在动车上吃的,好像是40块一份快餐吧,但是难吃是真难吃,红烧肉为啥能烧出肉汤的感觉,油还是水太多了,不过么动车上啊,没办法,将就。中间动车停靠站点时间稍长一点点,我们两个车厢的人都跑出去透透气。 到了下午4点多的时候,终于到达潮汕,入住在潮州宝华酒店,它是一家四星级涉外商务酒店,环境与条件很不错,地接导游提醒我们晚上可以去旁边逛逛潮州古城,也可以去吃点小吃,介绍了好几种,我是都没记住,唯独一种记住了,那是导游说不要第一天就去吃的——生腌,到了直接吃肠胃很有可能受不了,生腌,大概是生吃吧,像醉蟹这样类型的吧,反正我是不会去的,第一天么,坐车坐得太累了,就呆在酒店里吧。 本来想早点睡,但是我的室友(标间,我们住两个人),拿出来笔记本,开始玩游戏,惊呆我了,出来旅游还带笔记本出来玩游戏,然后点了肯德基……后来睡的时候应该已经晚上11点多了吧。 24日早晨,我像...

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买之前不知道 Neo 2 这么好玩

因为不到半部手机的售价,难免会以玩具的眼光看待 DJI Neo 2。但实际体验之后,大大超出我的预期!

首先,作为“飞行自拍杆”,预设的拍摄程序一键就能拍出很棒的照片和视频。

其次,作为入门航拍器,这么小的身板,飞行能力和拍摄质量远超我的期望。以起飞点开始计算,实测上升高度最高到 120 米;前进距离最远飞到 1.6 公里,电池掉到 58%,出于担心我立即返航了。图传画面很稳定,理论上能飞更远。

穿越水库

120 米降落

俯瞰村庄

航拍村庄

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威言威语:探秘上海自然博物馆

这次去上海自然博物馆探秘,馆特别大,有五层,我们从上往下逛,根本看不完。很多展品只能匆匆扫一眼,但已经足够让人惊叹。生命如何一路演化,自然怎样悄然变迁——那些曾经在书里读到的、在脑海里勾勒的画面,就这样在眼前铺展开来,具体、生动、真切,甚至比想象中更辽阔、更细腻。

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