it is his name isvideo tap...

这是个机器人猖狂的时代,请输一下验证码,证明咱是正常人~英语同义句转换1.Benny was washing his face and the tap was on 2.We were very surprised when the girl lifted the box3.To get there by bike is easy for us4.The poor boy left school after finishing his homework5.It is free to readers6.We can't live if there is no water7.it's easy for me to get here【第6和第7要求两句】
xD this is fun...1.When Benny was washing his face,he also had the water tap on.2.Our doubts about the possibility of the girl lifting the heavy box was gone,when she actually performed the task.3.It is easy for us to get to our destination via biking.4.The poor boy finally left school because he have completed his homework.5.It would not cost you a single penny if you are a reader.6a.Without water,humans would die.b.Without water,humans would perish.(开玩笑啦; 但的确是同一个意思; 只是换了个词而已...但:Water is a vital component of human survival,because without water,humans would ease to be on the face of planet Earth.) 7a.Coming here was not a hard task.b.It was easy for me to arrive at this destination.
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请问楼主是初中的还是高中的,因为要根据学龄程度来做这些题目。
扫描下载二维码It is his变为否定句
It is not his.= It isn't his.不明白的再问哟,请及时采纳,多谢!
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It isn't his
It isn't his
It isn't his.在is后面加not就行了
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扫描下载二维码it is his lunchbox怎样改成否定句
软件神罚345
在is后面加not.it is not his lunchbox
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It isn't his lunchbox.  改成否定句时有be动词就在be动词后加not。  is not的缩写是isn't
it is not his lunchbox.或it isn't his lunchbox.
扫描下载二维码With Taptalk, it takes just one tap to send a photo or video
Taptalk for iPhone&screenshots
Messages disappear once you’ve read them, but that’s not really the point. The point is to make sharing a photo or video as fast as physically possible. And I can’t imagine how anyone could make doing so any faster — without scanning your brain waves, at least.
Taptalk got its first break on Product Hunt, a new site beloved by the tech elite that aims to list the most interesting new websites and apps. This past week, Taptalk raised an undisclosed round of financing from SV Angel, one of the Valley’s top investors. The, however, says that Facebook engineers are so enamored with Taptalk that they’re cloning some of its best elements for a new chat app of their own. All the while, the company’s Android app has
and its iPhone app is .
Their app would only have one screen, and would be so simple it wouldn’t even need a send button
All signs, however, point to Taptalk hitting it big very, very soon. Why? Because Taptalk is no parlor trick. There’s some genuinely great thinking behind the app that primes it for success in today’s hottest app category. It all started with the small Berlin-based team’s desire to build a communication app that wasn’t a series of contact lists, message threads, and compose windows. Their app would only have one screen, and would be so simple it wouldn’t even need a send button.
"We wanted to make a messenger built from the ground up for a smartphone," says founder Onno Faber. His words echo the remarks of countless app makers, but Faber and company truly did start from the ground up. They didn’t even want to include a keyboard, let alone a send button. "The idea is to replace the old-style Nokia keyboard, and after that, the smartphone keyboard, with a one-button experience," says Faber. "The smartphone is capable of sending something meaningful in one tap."
"The smartphone is capable of sending something meaningful in one tap."
Faber says that most messaging apps, including even the visually distinct Snapchat, have all been cut from the same cloth — a cloth made of ideas and metaphors about how a messaging app should look. Snapchat went a long way towards rethinking how we chat by reversing the order in which we send messages: while most photo apps treat photos as attachments to be tacked on to your texts, Snapchat made sending a quick photo the first order of business upon opening the app. Taptalk makes sending a photo even simpler.
When you open the app, you immediately see a camera viewfinder, mimicking Snapchat’s trademark interface. But Taptalk also shows the people you can send a photo or video to below the viewfinder, using faces as send buttons. In other words, Taptalk combines the act of shooting and sending a photo in one tap. This means you need to be careful that you don’t tap the wrong person, because Taptalk includes no unsend button. Snapchat, meanwhile, asks you to tap a camera shutter button, then a Next button, then the name of a friend, and then finally the send button. By reducing the friction points of sending a message, Taptalk could further multiply the number of photos you might send per day. Speed, of course, is far from the only reason Snapchat has hit it big, but the most successful messaging apps have often been the speediest messaging apps.
The app emphasizes one-to-one messaging over group chatting or broadcasting
Faber won’t disclose the average number of photos each of its users send per day, but says that the number is very high. "When we were designing this, we thought that 100 photos a day shouldn’t be a problem," says Faber. "It’s not heavy like having 100 emails you have to work through." To that effect, Taptalk includes no message list to poke through. To read messages, you tap a small bubble over and over to flip through new messages. It’s a small but important detail, and another place where Taptalk reduces the number of taps it takes to do something. Taptalk’s user interface is undoubtedly confusing for new users, but Faber says it could lend to the app’s virality. "Most people are confused in the beginning, but the way people get on it is usually through a friend who explains how it works," he says. Snapchat’s interface is also intimidating from the outset, but seemingly hasn’t held back its growth at all.
But Taptalk’s user interface isn’t the only interesting idea here: the app emphasizes one-to-one messaging over group chatting or broadcasting like most communication apps. In fact, you can only keep 11 recent contacts in the app’s friend grid. Other friends are a swipe away. It’s a smart gamble by Faber and co., that perhaps most of us only chat with fewer than 11 people on a daily basis. And Taptalk’s messages can only be sent one-to-one, increasing the value of any message. A common critique of Snapchat is that when you receive a message, there’s no way to know if it was sent to you or also to 10 others.
When I spoke recently with Snapchat CEO Evan Spiegel about, he talked about how it eschewed traditional metaphors for placing and receiving calls in order to make video chat as simple as possible. By breaking down these metaphors, Spiegel says, we can become closer to the people we love. For sending a quick photo, Taptalk might be the closest we’ve yet come.
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