额原来还有手机版的我还不知道 额可惜网吧没有无线- -还得回家下
。。手机回复哦。。给奖励。。好处拿来。不过这个做的很不错哦
来自:Android客户端
手机版太慢了
,出了这个以后签到就方便了
来自:IOS客户端
卡的上不去登不了账号
刚下好,手机能不用积分进里番吗
给一个下载链接啊……如何手机直接下二维码?
找回复找了好久,原来是那个萌碗。
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140214192342_52fdfcbe701f7.jpg
来自:Android客户端
有没有iphone版的?
我也来拿分了!
新版本的用起来很不错啊!
回复试试 感觉好高级的说
来自:Android客户端
拿积分来咯
我要买手机→_→
http://yun.baidu.com/share/link?shareid=891099672&uk=2955121719
手機冒個泡先
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140216145219_53006023f30cc.jpg
来自:Android客户端
好像是這個樣子回復
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140216145527_530060df123d1.jpg
来自:Android客户端
为何只有二维码,没有应用的链接O_o,手机流量有限硬伤啊~~~
我也上榜来看看
刚用,用户界面很好~楼主给我战力吧!⊙ω⊙
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140217103624_530175a8b9a20.jpg
来自:Android客户端
刚用,楼主给我战力吧!
感觉还不错哟!
期待后续完善
手机吗留个言咯
来自:IOS客户端
大神我来晚了吗!
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140219090038_53040236433d2.jpg
来自:Android客户端
大神…赐我战力…
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140219130930_53043c8aa8ff8.jpg
来自:Android客户端
比电脑上慢啊,真的
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140226175914_530dbaf294167.jpg
来自:IOS客户端
好的发帖看看可以不
来自:Android客户端
怎么我的登录说密码错误啊?求解
晒图咯 不错吧!!!
1212/1272/201402/20140227005737_530e1d01524fe.jpg
来自:Android客户端
这应该都不用截图了吧!
来自:Android客户端
怎么没里番区了?
不好截图只回复下吧
来自:Android客户端
原来可以截图
1212/1272/201402/20140227140810_530ed64a48469.jpg
来自:Android客户端
原来可以截图
1212/1272/201402/20140227140810_530ed64a48469.jpg
来自:Android客户端
一直都是用手机,这可真是太棒了~\(≧▽≦)/~
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140227224322_530f4f0a5ac64.jpg
soso032931 发表于 2014-1-27 15:15 static/image/common/back.gif
這樣露一下臉就可以了嗎?
来自:Android客户端
{:6_640:}
再试试 上次的好像都没成功
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201402/20140228081956_530fd62cf0bc4.jpg
来自:Android客户端
这个有木有电脑版的。
咳咳,签到咯
来自:IOS客户端
手机端真的很卡很卡- -
表示客户端有些过于简洁,,
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201403/20140302210640_53132ce05b389.jpg
来自:Android客户端
呐呐~大大~我来领战斗力咯~的确挺好用的。
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201403/20140305150546_5316ccca111b8.jpg
来自:Android客户端
肿么装不上去,ios7的系统?{:6_648:}
QNASNNG and is author of. He tweets often at.
How we spend our down time―whether watching films on Netflix or toying with Photoshop―has been completely reshaped by the Internet.The idea of free time has been losing its meaning in the Internet era. We end up idling with the same computers we once used to be productive and make money, and the convergence has made it increasingly difficult to be genuinely non-productive.
helps highlight this phenomenon with a wealth of new statistics about what people with Internet do with their free time. The report finds that among those who use the Internet for leisure, the average daily person spent 100 minutes relaxing online, about a third of the five hours of free time most people have. The more leisure time spent online, the less time subjects spent socializing offline, dropping from about 41 minutes in 2003 to 37 minutes in 2011.
As our leisure time becomes less physically social, it becomes more focused on seeking and discovering, driven by an ironic sense of absence. It’s the nature of the Internet to confuse questions and erase the original intent one had in opening a browser window within three or four clicks. The feeling of being enmeshed in an aura of perpetually unfulfilled possibility emanating from one’s laptop screen is quickly becoming one of the hallmarks of our time and place, chasing after random story threads and trivial curiosities that wipe one’s memory clean for a few minutes or hours.
Even in opening mostly passive experiences of Hulu or Netflix, one scrolls through a thicket of distracting squares carrying the potential to derail or distract one’s original purpose for logging on. Leisure time on the Internet is less about pursuing a singular interest than allowing it to be flooded by other, unrelated interests, a way of dosing your brain’s propensity to ask why by letting it binge on an infinite stream of questions and the digital puzzle pieces that can be assembled into something approximating an answer.
Observations like this are often pushed into binary conflicts about whether the older way of doing things was any better. I grew up as part of the last generation without regular access to the Internet and am certain the hours I spent marooned on the couch staring at network television trying to carve some interesting thoughts out of Friends or Ricki Lake were not better than being online. But I’d hesitate to argue our present moment is innately better either.
Each generation shapes their own limits in different ways, making different social and cultural structures to attend to them. And the kinds of things we want to make for ourselves depend on the tidal sways of politics, economy, and the temporary ideological infatuations they can bring.
Perpetual productivity has become the ethos of the Internet, and so it’s natural for that value to find a place for itself in our downtime. By many counts, , with between four to eight extra hours of free time each week. Mysteriously, Americans are sleeping less,compared to some estimates of . We have never been freer, and yet the price of this luxurious capacity for relaxation is obsessive attention to an stream of content that can destroy our sense of time and purpose, until suddenly its 3 a.m. and you’re watchingon YouTube while carrying on five Twitter conversations and rebloggingto your Tumblr with creepy slogans added.
It’s perverse to think of moments like these as leisurely, or even free. They seem more like the product of an infinite restlessness, like a dog that has become stuck in the motion of circling the spot its chosen to sleep in for the night without ever being able to lie down. This is largely attributable to the increasing number of leisure activities that can be broken down into profitable commodities for the companies that provide them. Watching television and reading a few magazines a month were certainly commodified forms of leisure, but the Internet has multiplied these forms, turned them interactive, and charged them with an increasing pace that is both impossible to fully absorb, and yet painful to step away from for fear of missing out on something that cannot be genuinely experienced nikesairmax2014.com in retrospect.
And an increasingly large percentage of the content in these channels is an abstract form of productivity that has wormed its way into our leisure, making the labor of an hour in Photoshop seem like fun because it might produce a funny picture, an act that is outwardly indistinguishable from an hour spent working in Photoshop to build a client proposal for an ad campaign for a new kind of dish soap. It’s you at the mouse and keyboard, headphones on, fingers moving in sporadic gestures, face unexpressive, with no other human voices around to interrupt your attention.
These points of overlap where work and relaxation seem to become dopplegangers are not just signs of an increasing leisure culture, but affects of a society that has made work so pervasive it sometimes feels impossible to tell when one is and isn’t working. Even when we’re not working our brains are looking for ways that we could be, in which light the Internet is what we have built for ourselves to drain that need.
Michael Thomsen isComplex'stech columnist. He has written for Slate, The Atlantic, The New Inquiry, n+1, Billboard, and is author of. He tweets often at.
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表示截图来拿战斗力咯-。-嘿嘿 谢谢楼主大大
论坛也能用手机上,涨姿势了!
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201403/20140308200725_531b07fde6317.jpg
上传拿奖励
恩恩这真是极好的
说回复应该会什么好呢?
http://pic1.motnt.com/1212/1272/201403/20140312154114_53200f9abd8d1.jpg
来自:IOS客户端
正好在用手机上额,