事隔兩年多的時間,Zorloo 為 Ztella 推出第二代了,名為 Ztella II。接駁訊源的一端依舊使用 USB Type-C,做到一插即用,可連接手機、iPad 或個人電腦等等;最大分別是接合耳機的一端,改用上 4.4mm 平衡輸出插口,而輸出功率比上代增強了不少,很容易就可感受得到強大的驅動力。
The story of the laptop DVD writer is a tale of how "essential tech" became a "hidden treasure." In the late 1990s and early 2000s, an internal DVD burner was a status symbol—if your laptop had one, you could "burn" custom mixtapes and backup massive (at the time) 4.7GB chunks of data. The Infamous "Cup Holder" Legend
As laptops slimmed down into "Ultrabooks," the internal DVD drive was the first thing to be sacrificed. Apple famously led this charge with the MacBook Air in 2008, followed by the last MacBook Pro with a drive in 2012. This created a sudden, desperate market for , which many users initially mocked as "lugging around a brick".
One of the most famous stories in tech support history involves a caller reporting that the "cup holder" on their new PC was broken. The technician, confused, eventually realized the user had been using the motorized CD/DVD tray to hold their coffee mug. While it seemed perfectly sized for a latte, the tray wasn't designed for the weight, leading to one of the most expensive coffee-related repairs in computing history. The Disappearing Act
The story of the laptop DVD writer is a tale of how "essential tech" became a "hidden treasure." In the late 1990s and early 2000s, an internal DVD burner was a status symbol—if your laptop had one, you could "burn" custom mixtapes and backup massive (at the time) 4.7GB chunks of data. The Infamous "Cup Holder" Legend
As laptops slimmed down into "Ultrabooks," the internal DVD drive was the first thing to be sacrificed. Apple famously led this charge with the MacBook Air in 2008, followed by the last MacBook Pro with a drive in 2012. This created a sudden, desperate market for , which many users initially mocked as "lugging around a brick".
One of the most famous stories in tech support history involves a caller reporting that the "cup holder" on their new PC was broken. The technician, confused, eventually realized the user had been using the motorized CD/DVD tray to hold their coffee mug. While it seemed perfectly sized for a latte, the tray wasn't designed for the weight, leading to one of the most expensive coffee-related repairs in computing history. The Disappearing Act