Ketua BEM UI Yatalathof Ma'shum Imawan mengungkapkan Bundaran HI dipilih karena mahasiswa tak lagi percaya dengan Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat (DPR) maupun pemerintah.
Aljazair live liputan di lokasi sore tadi capt. Kenapa ini penting? Karena pemerintah takut kalau banyak media luar memberitakan ketidakpuasan masyarakat.
Beberapa kekuatan besar di Indonesia kalo bersatu demo semua,
- Mahasiswa
- Ojol
- Supporter Bola
- Kelompok Silat, Sound Horeg dan Komunitas motor CB
- Ibu-ibu Muslimat
Cici-cici sama Koko-koko Citraland, PIK, Pondok Indah dan daerah lainnya nggak usah ikut turun gpp
Kalian bagian logistik
Demo di Bundaran HI ini unik, karena biasanya demo ke lembaga pemerintahan tertentu
Tapi bundaran HI itu sumber traffic: masyarakt dan sosial media
peluang media ngeliput naik
peluang sosmed divideoin orang juga naik
orang aware-> tujuan demo terpenuhi dengan cara baru
When Nokia engineers examined the original iPhone in the summer of 2007, they found a 2-megapixel camera with no flash, no autofocus, and no video. Their flagship phone, released three months earlier, had a 5-megapixel Carl Zeiss lens (the optics brand used in Leica cameras), autofocus, an LED flash, and video recording. Nokia beat Apple on every camera specification. Nokia also no longer makes phones.
Apple's advantage came from three engineering decisions, none of which appeared on a spec sheet. Speed was the first. Nokia's camera took 6 seconds just to open the app, with the whole process reaching 8 seconds before a first photo could be taken. Apple chose fixed focus deliberately, locking the lens at a fixed point where anything from arm's length to the horizon stays sharp. With the autofocus delay gone, the whole process took under 2 seconds from pocket to saved photo. For the actual photos people take of people and places, that speed was worth more than 3 extra megapixels.
The second decision was matching resolution to the actual use case. A 2-megapixel image is 1,600 by 1,200 pixels. The iPhone's own screen in 2007 was 320 pixels wide. The most common destination for a camera phone photo was a text message or an email with a file size limit. Apple sized the sensor for where photos were going, not for what looked best on a product box.
The third decision was the path from shutter to shared. Sharing a photo on the Nokia N95 meant opening the image, pressing Options, choosing Send, picking Bluetooth or email or a picture text, and working through sub-menus from there. On iPhone, every photo went straight into a built-in album, swipeable with a finger, emailable in two taps. Apple designed the camera as a communication tool first.
Nokia held roughly half of global smartphone sales in 2007. By 2013, that number had collapsed to single digits. Microsoft bought Nokia's phone business for $7.2 billion and wrote off virtually the entire investment as a loss within 15 months. Digital camera shipments peaked at 121 million units in 2010 and fell 94% by 2023. Apple became the company most closely linked to the phrase "digital camera" in media analysis by 2013, built from a sensor that lost to Nokia on paper.
The Nokia engineers who analyzed that first iPhone were right that the numbers didn't add up. The market had simply stopped counting them.