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Friday, April 28, 2017

พูดกับตัวเอง

 ช่วงท้ายวิดิโอหายไป เพราะความผิดพลาดของป้าโอ้ท ไม่ได้โอนไฟล์จากไอแพดเข้าคอมพิวเตอร์โดยตรง แต่ป้าโอ้ทส่งทางไลน์ เวลาถูกตัดไป ป้าโอ้ทไม่รู้ แต่วิดิโอพอรู้เรื่องเน่อะ ^_^ 



Nakorn Sri Thamarat

Saturday, April 22, 2017

Google Home now recognizes your individual voice



อ่านออนไลน์  Click to read the article online

Google Home now recognizes your individual voice

Virtual assistants just got a lot more personal.

Google Home -- the company's voice-controlled smart speaker that plays music, searches Google (GOOG) and lists recipes -- can now tell the difference between you and others based on voice. 
As of Thursday the square, cylindrical device will now recognize partners, roommates, kids and guests who come to visit. now supports multiple accounts. Also, Google Home users can now create up to six different accounts on their devices. 
So when you say the trigger phrases "OK Google" or "Hey Google," the Home will listen for who is asking and provide answers based on your voice. For example, Google Assistant will know what's on your calendar, what your reminders are and what your commute looks like. 
It's a helpful update for users who live in multi-person homes, and the feature gives Google a boost over Amazon (AMZNTech30) in personalizing virtual assistants, as the Echo still doesn't have voice recognition. 
To learn your voice, Google Home will ask you to speak the key phrases that "wake up" the device. Technology embedded in the Google Home analyzes different vocal characteristics, pinpointing what makes your voice different from other people's. 
It will also know when someone talking to it doesn't have a profile, preventing personal data being read aloud to someone it doesn't belong to. For instance, if a guest asks what someone's calendar looks like, Google won't read it. 
Users have to set up multi-account in the Google Home app under "Link your account." And specific features, like personalized playlists, must be set up individually.

Thursday, April 20, 2017

Apps in China



Beijing summons Apple over live-streaming apps


Beijing's internet regulators are turning up the heat on Apple.

Authorities in the Chinese capital say they plan to summon the U.S. tech giant to urge it to "tighten up checks" on apps available in its App Store, according to state news agency Xinhua
Law enforcement officials have previously met with Apple representatives about examining live-streaming apps in Apple's store, Xinhua reported. 
The summons is part of a crackdown on live-streaming platforms, a joint effort being carried out by Beijing's Cyberspace Administration, Public Security Bureau and Cultural Market Administrative Law Enforcement Team. 
The report didn't say when the meeting would take place. Apple didn't immediately respond to a request for comment. 
The extra scrutiny is the latest example of Chinese authorities interfering in what content Apple offers consumers in the country. 
In January, Apple said it had complied with a Chinese request to pull the New York Times' news apps from the App Store in China
The world's most populous country remains a key market for the U.S. tech firm. Amid falling iPhone sales in China, Apple is looking to sell more apps and services there. 
That effort hit a stumbling block about a year ago when Chinese regulators shut downApple's iBooks and iTunes Movies services in the country. 
The summons reported this week comes after Beijing authorities found that three Chinese websites had violated internet regulations on live streaming, with users broadcasting forbidden content on their platforms, according to Xinhua. 
All three websites' apps are available in Apple's store. 
New regulations that went into effect late last year prohibit users from live streaming content that could "endanger national security and undermine social stability."

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Trump's tax returns



Trump's tax returns are the target of nationwide protests on Saturday

Turns out, people still care about President Trump's tax returns. On Saturday, protesters across the U.S. plan to demand that Trump make his most recent tax returns public. It's something every president and presidential nominee has done for the past 40 years. Trump has said that Americans "don't care at all" about his tax returns, but polls show 74% of Americans say he should release them. Many lawmakers, including some Republicans, have also called on him to make them public. And a petition demanding that Trump release his returns has garnered more than 1 million signatures.

Still, the White House has not indicated Trump has any intentions of releasing his returns. So Trump critics are prepared to make some noise. "We march to demand that the president release his returns, as he has repeatedly promised, but failed, to do," the Tax March website reads. "We march because it is in the best interest of the American people to know what financial entanglements and conflicts of interest our leaders have."

Related: What we'd learn if Trump would just release his tax returns

The organizers of Saturday's marches say there are more than 180 planned across 48 states and the District of Columbia.

Much like the "Pussyhats" symbolized by the Women's March in January, the hallmark of this protest will be giant inflatable chickens. They're meant to symbolize Trump's cowardice, according to Delvone Michael, a member of the Tax March executive committee.

Michael is a senior political strategist for the progressive Working Families Party. The march's executive committee also includes organizers from the National Women's Law Center, the Indivisible Project, the Georgetown Center on Poverty and Inequality and a host of other groups.

Related: Pelosi, Dems not letting go of Trump tax return push

There's no way to know for sure how large the crowds will be. In some of the largest cities -- Washington, D.C., Los Angeles, New York and San Francisco -- anywhere from 10,000 to more than 20,000 people are planning to attend, according to Facebook event pages.

However, many cities may draw crowds of fewer than 100. The Facebook page for a march in Savannah, Georgia, for example, shows only a dozen people plan on attending. For a march in Charlotte, North Carolina, less than 100 Facebook users have said they'll go.

Of course, turnout at the tax marches could surprise on the upside.

Kathleen Petersen, a retiree who is organizing the march in Cheyenne, Wyoming, also helped organize the local Women's March there the day after Trump was inaugurated. "We thought we'd be lucky if we got 200 people. And we got 2,000," Petersen said.

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Koh Payam

โทนเสียง

ฝีกพูดภาษาอังกฤษ..funny story วันนี้ กับ เมื่อ ห้าปีที่แล้ว

16 เมษายน 2560

ใครที่กังวล และใกล้หมดกำลังใจในการฝึกพูด มาฟังป้าโอ้ทคลิปนี้ (ใครเคยดูและฟังแล้วจะผ่านไปก็ได้นะคะตามสะดวก) ตอนนั้นป้าโอ้ทหาวิธี ทุกทางให้ตัวเองพูดเยอะ ๆ คิดอะไรไม่ออก ก็เอานิทานภาษาไทยที่อ่าน และ ฟังมา มานึกเป็นภาษาอังกฤษ แล้วเล่าตามที่เราคิด และ เท่าที่คำศัพท์ในเหม่งที่มี ณ ขณะนั้น ป้าโอ้ทเอาไปเล่าให้เพื่อน ๆ กับ ครูที่เรียนภาษาอังกฤษ ตอนนั้นฟังด้วย นิทานเป็นเรื่องขำ แต่เนื่องจากคนเล่ายังมีความมั่นใจน้อย อารมณ์ที่ส่งมากับเรื่องเลยยังไม่ได้ แต่ถ้าเทียบกับปัจจุบัน ให้เล่าใหม่นี่คงจะได้อารมณ์กว่าหลายขุม    มีคลิปใหม่มาให้ดูและฟังด้วยค่ะ ข้างล่าง



Friday, April 14, 2017

my friend talked about cooking

Embarrassing Moments


ตื่นมา เปิดอ่านเลย ยังไม่ได้ล้างหน้า แปรงฟัน อ่านตะกุกตะกัก 
ผิดหลายคำด้วย  ด้วยความที่อยากอ่านตั้งแต่เมื่อคืน 

ตัวอย่างคำผิด knew เป็นอดีต ต้องออกว่า นิว ไม่ใช่โนว นะคะ อ่านผิด ไม่ได้แก้ :)
all the other... ดิ โอ้ทอ่านเป็น ดีส


Monday, April 3, 2017

at swiming pool

31 มีนาคม 2560

วันนี้ป้าโอ้ทกำหนดสถานการณ์ให้น้องสองคน แม้ว่าเรา รวมป้าโอ้ทด้วย ไม่แม่นภาษาอังกฤษ ในทุกด้าน แต่เรามีความมั่นใจที่จะพูด พูดทั้ง ๆ ที่ผิด ^_^ สนุกดีค่ะ  สิ่งที่ผิด เราเรียนรู้กันไปทุกวัน ค่อย ๆ พัฒนาไปด้วยกัน

March 31, 2017

I gave a situation to my friends as in the video.
We are not good at English but we are trying our best to get better every time.
The most, we have full confident to speak out and having fun together.

Little boy



This little boy is reading a big book. He is only five years old. He is wearing an orange shirt, brown pants, ​and white sock. He really enjoys reading. His parents have been reading to him since he was a baby. He learns new words every day. He likes to read alone in quiet places or with his parents.

Saturday, April 1, 2017

Being Too superstitions

 

นี่คือน้องเหมียว ที่ป้าโอ้ทพูดถึง This is Meow who I mentioned.