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IT之家 5 ?月 16 日新闻,在今日晚间的新品宣布会上,蔚来新 ES6 汽车正式上市,整车购置价钱 33.8 万元起,电池租用计划 26.8 万元起。
新车上市限时赠予 5 年免费换电
新车搭载第三代智能系统 Cedar S? 雪松,推出全新“月灰银?”配色,搭载 21 英寸多辐流光轮圈;大灯设?计也有调解,从近似三角形变为梯形,透风口位置也重新灯外侧移至下方。
新 ES6 全系标配 iPhone 数字钥匙,搭载 15.6 英寸 AMOLED 中控横屏、19.4 英寸 W-HUD 和 800 万像素流媒体内后视镜,同时搭载 NOMI Mate 3.0 语音助理和原生怀挡设计。
该车进一步优化中控岛台部分的储物空间,同时车内将配备双 50W 风冷手机无线充电区域以及带有盖板的杯架置物槽,偏向盘的实体按钮设计也有优化。
新 E?S6 的音响接纳了 7.1.4 杜比全景声、23 个扬声器,升级 8 寸重低音、升级 60 W 前门板低音单位、升级整车调音算法、升级杜比全景声调校。
别的,新 ES6 的?二排座椅角度抵达了 35°,比前代增添 4?°,头枕面积也举行了加?大;二排扶手举行了优化设计,变大变软,还增添 ET7 同款悬轻薄移杯托;座椅配有磁吸接口,化妆镜、纸巾盒都可以吸附上去,椅背还支持选装小桌板。
蔚来新 ES6 前排标配加热透风推拿,还标配 Nappa 座椅,交流充放电套装可免费选装(不?选装的用户可限时置换为 5000 元选装基金)。
蔚来新 ES6 搭载蔚来自研神玑 NX9031 芯片,号称是“全球首颗车规 5nm 高阶智驾芯片”,配有满血版天枢 Sky OS? 整车全域操作系统,举行 15 项底盘升级。
?该车还标配了智能迅速掉头功效,转弯直径最多镌汰 30~50cm,号称清静无噪音、轮胎无磨损?。
新 ES
?蔚来新 ES6 还搭载天鹰座超感系统,包括了 29 个高?性能感知硬件:
1,5?50 nm 的超远距离高精度激光雷达 x 1;
800 万像素智能驾驶高清摄像头 x 7,300 万像素高感光环视专用摄像头 x 4;
4D 成像雷达 x 1、超声波传感器 x 12、GNSS + IMU 高精度定位单位、HOD 驾驶员脱手检测传感器、ADMS 增强主驾感知。
标配 1,550 nm 高性能超远距激光雷达,最远探测距离 500 m,4D 成像雷达最远探测距离 3?70 m。
蔚来新 ES6 搭载蔚来天下模子手艺架构,点到点全域领航辅助 NOP+,笼罩城区蹊径领航辅助、高速领航辅助、停车场领航辅助,全域领航辅
蔚来?新 ES6 还标配全域车道级导航,这是蔚来和高德联合开发带来的全新的全域车道级导航,不受都会和蹊径规模的限制,天下蹊径都能使用;尚有?天下各地地标修建的高精度 3D 建模。
动力方面,蔚来新 ES6 全系标配双电机?四&驱,百公里加速 4 秒级,配有四活塞制动卡?钳。
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债券在已往一个月遭到抛售,推动美国10年期国债收益率自8月初以来首次凌驾4%,主要缘故原由是鉴于美国经济仍然强劲,投资者削减了对政策激进松开的押注The rain misted down and I had two choices: the road up the hill, or the one alongside the river. I stood next to some kind of cement plant, most of it hidden behind a corrugated metal fence dripping with moisture. My pack pulled down on my shoulders. The river, engorged by two days of rain, roared and echoed against the mountains. A man in blue overalls emerged from behind a small Fuso truck. Like many people I’d encountered in Japan, he wanted to help me. I was grateful. I put roughly 25 percent of my Japanese language skills to work. “Sumimasen?” I said (Excuse me). “Hai?” “Tsumago?” He gestured down the road, I thought along the river. He said quite a few things that I didn’t understand. I thanked him and strode off, pack on back, hands on straps, rain on head. A later, after continuing along the river and then beneath a highway overpass, pressing against the wall because there was no shoulder, and then doubling back in confusion — this can’t be right — I found myself outside the same plant, beside the same fence, talking to the same man. He seemed mildly frustrated with me. He gestured again, and this time I went up the hill. Of course — when you have a pack on your back, the destination is always up the hill. I soon came into Tsumago, a beautifully preserved town on the Nakasendo road in the Kiso Valley. I had wanted to visit for years — 35, actually — and had chosen to walk from the train so I could first experience the town as travelers had in the 19th century: on foot, the neat rows of wooden houses revealing themselves in diminishing perspective as I turned the corner. But it was 2011, so instead I entered via the parking lot, and had to negotiate my pack between an idling bus and a pair of vending machines featuring the image of Tommy Lee Jones. My obsession with Japan began in 1979 when my parents took me from our house in Brooklyn to see a show of woodblock prints at the Cooper Hewitt museum in Manhattan featuring works by the great landscape artist Hiroshige. The show featured prints from Hiroshige’s first famous series, the 53 Stations of the Tokaido, which chronicled life along the ancient coast highway that connected Edo, Tokyo, and Kyoto. Traveling the road was an envied, experience, and those who got the chance availed themselves of spectacular views, local culinary delicacies, hot spring baths and other more carnal pursuits along the way. Those who couldn’t go, or wanted souvenirs to remember their journeys, bought prints like Hiroshige’s for roughly the price of a double serving of noodles. The strikingly modern designs, the warm hues of the skies and trees, the towns nestled in the mountains or by the sea, the raucous joy of the travelers, and the almost palpable sense of the seasons lit up something inside me — I stood there transfixed. I was soon spending hours trying to draw like Hiroshige. I became obsessed by all things Japanese — books, movies I even took up Japanese fencing. The country had recovered from the war, but was not yet the economic powerhouse it would become in the 1980s — it was something of a blank slate for my imagination. This interest never quite faded away like others of adolescence. But over the decades, various events (college, jobs, children) seemed timed to prevent me from actually visiting Japan. Or maybe I just told myself that. I suppose, deep in my heart, I didn’t want modern reality to get in the way of my childhood fantasy land. So in 2011 when my wife and two children had finally had enough — Why don’t you just go? — I screwed up my courage and went, with one goal of recreating the Hiroshige experience. The Tokaido is mostly built over, but portions of the Nakasendo, which connects Tokyo and Kyoto via the interior, and which Hiroshige had also chronicled, are still preserved. The evening after my rainy wrong turn I clumped eagerly up the road from Tsumago to the town of Magome. I was in some kind of heaven that day, in either bright sunshine or cool, crisp shade, but was rarely out of earshot of a highway. At one point, deep in the woods, I encountered a vending machine (Tommy Lee Jones again). I had an iced coffee. Four years later, as I planned my return to Japan, I knew I had to travel beyond the populated heart of the country if I wanted to really replicate the world I had seen in those prints, going farther afield than Hiroshige himself. And so I chose the Kumano Kodo, a series of trails through deep forest and small towns on the Kii Peninsula several hours south of Osaka. It’s a religious pilgrimage that I came across in my obsessive reading. Pilgrims go to visit the numerous shrines along the way, worshiping the mountains themselves. They’ve done so since the sixth century. It’s said one can achieve spiritual powers by enduring the route’s physical challenge. Spirituality aside, this seemed to have everything I wanted: long walks deep in the woods, beautiful towns with little hotels promising hot baths, sake and great meals. The idea of going alone was intimidating (I could only imagine how little English was spoken) but I hated the idea of being part of a group with a guide. My Japanese obsession is a very private thing. And that’s when I discovered Oku Japan, and the tour. I found it online. The reviews were good. For $955, Oku would book my hotels and provide me with a guide to the trail. The company, based in Cheshire, England, had an office in Japan with an emergency phone number this made my wife feel better. I opted for a hike, paying a little more for a single supplement, but less because I’d take care of my own train tickets with a Japan Rail Pass. Oku provided me with timetables. And so with my trusty pack on my back, I set off for my second trip to Japan. First I spent two days in Tokyo. I visited print galleries during the day and wandered Shinjuku at night — to a New Yorker, it felt like 20 Times Squares — where I was carried along in a swirl of crowds, neon, blaring pop music, screeching overhead trains, weird bird tweets at walk signs and the approaches of touts who promised “100 percent naked women,” all the beer I could drink in 60 minutes or both. I deflected offers of the first by pointing to my wedding ring, and the second by feigning indignation and announcing that I did not drink. Then I went off in search of a quiet cocktail bar. I found several, including a tiny one in the decrepit but atmospheric Golden Gai section, where the bartender said I looked like Jack Bauer from “24. ” I don’t, but the name stuck, and the other drinkers exclaimed “Goodnight, Jack Bauer!” in tipsy unison as I returned to the alley an hour or so later. At my inn in Kyoto, a package awaited from Oku Japan: my itinerary, a booklet detailing the Kumano Kodo with directions (I would be taking the Nakahechi route) and several beautiful laminated color maps with height elevations. I was all set. The next morning, having condensed my essentials and a few of my favorite books about Japan into a shoulder bag, I grabbed a boxed lunch at Kyoto Station and got on the Super Kuroshia No. 7 limited express, nonreserved car, as per my instructions. I studied my itinerary and maps as the outskirts of Kyoto and then Osaka gave way to small towns and finally, the blue expanse of the Inland Sea, dotted with tiny islands as jagged and numerous as those portrayed by Hiroshige. The train hugged the west coast of the peninsula before arriving at the town of where I got off and found the bus that would take me into the interior. As I got on, I noticed a group of Westerners who seemed to be following the same instructions. This was something I had not considered: Others would be taking the same tour at the same time and I would be, by default, part of a group. The bus climbed away from the cluttered coastline into rich green mountains, and eventually along a wide, pebbly river. Soon enough, and right on time, we were in Takijiri, a tiny town in a deep ravine at the intersection of the Tonda and Ishifune rivers where the Kumano Kodo begins. I paid the 960 yen (about $8. 80) Oku had prepared me for, and went into a shop to get water and a bamboo walking stick. I also wanted to let the others get ahead of me. I followed my instructions. The first shrine, Takijiri oji, was just behind the shop. I walked toward it, and then to the left around it, and saw the beginning of the trail, a sharply ascending ladder of logs and tangled tree roots, slick with damp leaves, beside a steep . Up I went. Have I mentioned that I’m not much of a hiker? Beyond my phase, athletics have never been a priority. I’m not outdoorsy I’m indoorsy. But my Hiroshige fantasy propelled me onward, even as my chest started to ache awfully soon. I’m also a little anxious about heights. This was an issue that first day, and on the subsequent two days, as the trail was often atop a towering cliff on the right side, the left side, or at a few spots, both sides, the path crowning a precipitous land bridge. At one point, I kicked a small rock to determine how long it would take to the reach the bottom. It was still bouncing down, on and on, more and more distant, when I resumed my trek. I got into a rhythm, marking my progress on my map and at every wooden trail marker. Oku explained the history and legends associated with this or that shrine or landmark, kept me from taking several wrong turns, and warned me away from a detour that, while promising a great view, would have been exhausting. And anyway, there were already views at every break in the trees — layers and layers of mountains, some smooth, others rough with treetops, their ridges meeting in diagonal lines, each a different shade of . The first day was only 2. 8 miles. Soon I descended into the tiny town of Takahara. Here two roads met on a gliding slope, and there were a few shops and one hotel, the Organic Hotel Takahara . Every room in the place, from the room with its bare support beams to the men’s and women’s baths to the bedrooms, had spectacular views of the yawning valley below, now tinted gold. I tossed my bag in my room and went to have a beer and take some notes on the terrace. The afternoon cooled: The instant the sun dipped behind the mountains, it felt as if the valley became . I found the group from the bus, beers one of the women with a laptop, and discovered that after my solitary day, I didn’t mind a little company. After a bit I went for a bath, joined in the wooden tub by two chatty and elderly Japanese men, and enjoyed the view of the darkening mountains some more before getting dressed for dinner, set for precisely 6:30 p. m. One member of the group, Janet, invited me to sit with them, and I liked the idea, but my hosts said this would be impossible: We were different parties, after all. Sometimes in Japan, I’ve found, rules can be intractable. So I ate alone — pickles, beef I dipped in boiling water, and several other items including a very western avocado dish — at the next table over, my back to the others. It was equal parts awkward and comic. “How are you doing over there, Wendell,” Janet asked at one point over her shoulder. The rules were relaxed as the meal ended, and I shifted my chair around and joined the other table as I finished my sake (not included in Oku’s fee). There were five of them: Janet her husband, Stan her aunt Elvina her colleague Pat and Pat’s friend, also named Pat. We traded the basic details of our lives. They were from Canada, Edmonton and Vancouver, with jobs that included judges and lawyers in family court. It made for fascinating conversation. They were also fierce hikers, having tackled many ambitious walks, such as the Camino de Santiago in Spain. They were indeed following Oku’s instructions, and had found the first day’s walk a snap. “Have you seen the elevations for tomorrow, and the day after?” one asked me. I had and said that I was worried. The second day’s hike was 6. 5 miles, including 1, 575 feet of ascent. I went down to the village to take in the view from there, and to allow the Canadians to get a head start I still envisioned my hike as a solitary adventure. Soon enough I was deep in the woods, marveling at the towering and Japanese cedars and passing an abandoned house that looked like something out of a Japanese horror movie. Some trees were flecked with orange. I sat on a stump to eat two sandwiches the Organic Hotel had packed for me for lunch. At one point I paused beside an especially deep ravine. The cedars stood like an infinite army of stoic and towering sentries all around and above and below me, endless legions of them, falling away on my hill and then rising higher on the next one, their tops shimmering gently way, way up there in the occasional breeze. A few beams of sunlight slanted down, but otherwise all was in shade. There wasn’t a sound, not a bird, not a cricket even the branches swaying in the breeze could not be heard, as if they were in a silent movie. My hiking senses sharpened. I came to learn that a glimpse of blue sky near the bottom of the trunks ahead meant I was reaching the crest of a mountain, just as the increasingly loud gurgle of a stream meant I was reaching the bottom. There always seemed to be more up than down. I encountered the occasional solitary hiker flying by with scissoring poles, pilgrims with twinkling bells, and small groups. One was a gaggle of young women from Osaka who asked me to take their picture, asked me to appear in a picture with them, and gave me as a reward a selection of Japanese candies. After they thanked me and I responded “Sure,” they engaged in a contest to see who could best imitate my voice, each attempt getting deeper and of longer duration. “Sure. ” “Sure. ” “Suuuuure. ” At another point I was joined by a retired Japanese man who spoke nostalgically of the months he’d spent in Indiana studying engineering. He practiced his English on me while I practiced my Japanese on him. (Sumimasen?) Oku had warned that the Kii Peninsula could be rainy, but I never had anything but sun. My stamina followed an arc: I tired quickly, then got into a rhythm, magically energized. I felt my mind open up and go free — it wandered through time, over that print show at the Cooper Hewitt, my family, my first trip to Japan, even my job: Solutions to several vexing problems at work suddenly became clear. I tired again as I approached my destination, the town of Chikatsuyu, where Oku had booked me at a minshuku, a guesthouse, more modest than a traditional Japanese inn. It sat on the far bank of the Tonda. I had another long, hot bath, this one fed by a hot spring, again with two chatty and elderly Japanese men, though not the same ones as the evening before. I threw in once and for all with the Canadians at dinner. Maybe I’d already tired a little of my own thoughts. We agreed to stick together the next day. Another group at the guesthouse was from Spain, including a stocky bald man said to be a karate expert. We started early the following morning — Elvina was soon way ahead — and marked our progress on our maps. We had lunch in a small field next to a stream: I had two rice balls I’d bought at a shop in Chikatsuyu and an egg that Elvina made me take from the hotel, saying she was worried I wouldn’t have enough for lunch. We saw some wildlife. A snake zipped between the feet of one of the Pats. Three monkeys ruffled branches down a hill, warning us off with ghastly shrieks. And a deer with two short, antlers and a white tail froze on the trail ahead of us. I reached for my camera but not quickly enough: the karate master bounded up from behind — “Qué pasa?” — and the deer bolted into the cedars as if it had been launched from a catapult. The Canadians paid more attention to hiking times and progress than I did. I learned a lot from them, like how each of the many shrines we passed had a small box containing a stamp and an ink pad. Or how I shouldn’t swing my hands when I hiked, because they could become swollen. In return I shared some of the many small facts I’d picked up about Japan in my decades of reading, like that the egg with a velvety texture that we’d had at breakfast was an “onsen egg” cooked in a hot spring. “Where did you learn that?” Janet asked me. “I don’t know. It’s just one of the obscure facts I picked up in the last 35 years. ” That day’s hike was the longest at nine miles with roughly 2, 000 feet of ascent. I was glad for that extra egg. This was the moderate option suggested by Oku it included a quick bus ride. There was an easier option with a longer bus ride but that felt like cheating. Eventually, we came out of the forest and walked along paved roads in little farming towns. The hike ended in the magnificent Grand Shrine at Hongu, a key stop for many of those pilgrims. The shrine’s wooden buildings sat atop a towering stone staircase limned by hundreds of white flags blazing with Japanese characters, a fittingly dramatic finale. That night’s accommodation was a modern hot springs hotel. I had a bottle of Kirin from the refrigerator in my room before sampling all the various baths. I bathed inside, I bathed outside, and after a farewell dinner with the Canadians, found one of two private baths unoccupied, so I bathed there, too, finally alone. These baths were in a little house, the damp wood wall that separated them open near the ceiling. Two Japanese women — a mother and a daughter, I suspect — had gone into the other one as I went into mine, and I listened groggily in the near darkness to their mellifluous words and laughter, and occasional tiny splashes, as I sat in the steaming water up to my neck. If Hiroshige could see me now. The emotions I experienced after my first trip to Japan in 2011 — and here my parents and children might want to skip ahead — were distinctly similar to those I’d experienced after losing my virginity: something I’d imagined a million times had now taken place, and while it wasn’t exactly as I’d expected, it was still pretty great, and I was now a different person. And I wanted to do it again. My second trip made it all feel more real. The fantasy Japan of color woodblock prints and movies was being replaced by the actual country. Those little encounters, with the gang at the Golden Gai bar, the hiker from Indiana, the men in the baths, a friend I met for lunch at Tokyo Station on my race back to Narita Airport and home, brought Japan ever so slightly into focus. Hiroshige probably never visited the Kii Peninsula. In fact, recent scholarship suggests he never even traveled the length of the Tokaido, creating some of his most famous designs from guidebooks. I don’t know and I don’t care: I’m certain that in those solitary moments deep in the woods, my mind free, the cedars like endless rows of sentries, as I walked a path worn smooth by pilgrims 1, 400 years ago, the silence complete, enveloping, I saw him. A selection of favorite books, movies and websites about Japan. Hiroshige: One Hundred Famous Views of Edo I can’t find an book of the Tokaido series, but this volume features the artist’s high point capturing life in Edo. Spectacular prints from the Brooklyn Museum. (George Braziller 2000) The Curious Casebook of Inspector Hanshichi A detective in Japan solves all sorts of strange doings. Every word is wonderful. (University of Hawaii Press 2007) Seven Japanese Tales The novelist Junichiro Tanizaki spins tales in early Japan. (Vintage Books 2001) Underground: The Tokyo Gas Attack and the Japanese Psyche Haruki Murakami collects oral accounts of the 1995 terrorist attack. As harrowing as it is riveting. (Vintage International 2001) Travels With Hiroshi Shimizu The Japanese love of strenuous hikes during the day and languorous hot baths at night is captured in these simple movies, all shot on location before the war. From the Criterion Collection. Kwaidan The Kumano Trail can be spooky, and no film captures Japanese horror folklore better than this 1965 Technicolor masterpiece by Masaki Kobayashi. It’s even better on . From the Criterion Collection. Oku Japan This company books guided and tours that really go deep into the Japanese countryside. Even if you can’t go, their website is filled with great photography and videos. Paul’s Travel Pics I have no idea who Paul is, but he’s a great photographer, writer and traveler, and this very detailed website acted as a crucial guide to my first trip to Japan, particularly the Nakasendo highway.看点网讯www zlook com 2020贺年神曲来了!《唐人街探案3》曝光贺年送福曲《恭喜蓬勃2020》MV,刘德华、王宝强、刘昊然三人惊喜同框,整体贺年,为观众送上鼠年祝福,时势欢喜,年味溢满屏幕
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热门谈论
方令正:
他说:“作为水师新型作战实力,我们从抗战精神中罗致奋进实力,练兵备战,磨炼本事。
李子中:
“在中共建党史上,湖南第一师范是中国共产主义运动和中国新民主主义革命的策源地之一,更是孕育革命人士的‘红色摇篮’。
来广营:
How the fuck it’s insurrection? I call it dissension. Gave him five years when all he wanted was protection.”
岳东兴:
举行本场角逐的衢州市柯城区,位于浙江省的西部,地处浙、闽、赣、皖四省外交处,素有四省通衢,五路总头”之称。
扎克瑞·奈顿:
哈啰打車方面体现,焦点車主駐留印證了哈啰打車開放化業務模式效果——過去一年哈啰已完成主流聚合平臺全接入,司機在哈啰可一站接起全網訂單,接單體驗越发便捷,收入增幅越发顯著
丹妮拉·皮耶萨:
美国视察与市场动荡 2023年3月,美国联邦视察局(FBI)在萨加尔·阿达尼会见美国时代,扣押了其电子装备