时间:2019-02-26 作者:英语课 分类:英语音频杂志


英语课

   Information Society


  
  by Richard Sidaway
  Once upon a time societies were organised around religion, farming, trade or industry. In many parts of the world today this is still true, but something else is becoming more important - the exchange of information, and the technology that we use to do this. Twenty-four hour news, e-commerce, international call-centres, mobile 1 phones, Global Positioning Systems … all these are making the world smaller and faster.
  The growth in telecommunications is now giving more and more people access to democratic 2 ideas, to the principles of international law and human rights, to the science that will help their country to develop or to the medical knowledge that can fight disease 3. It is starting a real global village which people only dreamed of a generation ago.
  But how can everybody in the world share the recent technological 4 advances? Millions of people cannot read these words because they don’t have access to a computer. They don’t understand English either, the language that 80% of the information is written in. They don’t even have a telephone. They are more worried about how far they will have to walk today to get clean water or if they can feed themselves and their families. For most people on this planet 5, information is not a priority 6.
  The contrast between countries that have information technology and those that don’t is called the ‘digital divide’. Scandinavia and South East Asia have a high number of people who use Information Communication Technologies (ICT). Central Africa and the Pacific have almost none.
  The United Nations is trying to make the information society a reality for more of the developing world. It wants to see rich countries transfer 7 new technology and knowledge to poorer nations.
  Ten years from now, the plan is that everybody in the world will have a radio or television and that 50% of the world’s population will have access to the internet from schools and universities, health centres and hospitals, libraries and museums. This will improve medical care and education, science and agriculture, business opportunities and employment 8. At the same time, they say, local communities, languages and cultures will become stronger.
  Just a dream? Certainly there are some contradictions 9. Does only good come with freedom of information? If information is power, why will people share it? Doesn’t more technology mean fewer jobs? And how can the exchange of information keep local cultures alive if most of that information is only in one language?
  It is much easier to get people connected to broadband or put government online in Europe than in South America or the Middle East. However, developing countries often leapfrog the process which richer nations went through, and avoid their mistakes. Brazil collects most of its taxes online these days. There are cyber cities in Dubai and Mauritius. And Taiwan and Hong Kong have better access to ICT than the United Kingdom. Maybe the English language isn’t so important after all.
  Perhaps the spread of technology means that the old centres of power are also changing. The United States introduced internet technology in the 1970s. But people are asking why they should continue to be in charge. Why should a small organisation 10 in California tell the rest of the world how computers talk to each other?
  The US says it makes the rules, but it doesn’t control the flow of information. The domain 11 name system (DNS) controls how internet addresses work, but not what a website or database 12 contains. Many want a more international approach, however. But they also want the internet to remain open and free for all to use.
  Can the world create an information society for all? If a farmer in Bangladesh can read this in the year 2015, then maybe the answer is yes.

adj.可移动的,易变的,机动的;n.运动物体
  • The old lady sits on a mobile chair every morning.那位老妇人每天上午坐在一把可携带使用的椅子上。
  • She's much more mobile now that she's bought a car.自从她买了汽车后,活动量就大多了。
adj.民主的;民主主义的,有民主精神的
  • Their country has democratic government.他们国家实行民主政体。
  • He has a democratic work-style.他作风民主。
n.疾病,弊端
  • The doctors are trying to stamp out the disease.医生正在尽力消灭这种疾病。
  • He fought against the disease for a long time.他同疾病做了长时间的斗争。
adj.技术的;工艺的
  • A successful company must keep up with the pace of technological change.一家成功的公司必须得跟上技术变革的步伐。
  • Today,the pace of life is increasing with technological advancements.当今, 随着科技进步,生活节奏不断增快。
n.行星
  • Neptune is the furthest planet from the sun. 海王星是离太阳最远的行星。
  • Rubbish, however, is only part of the problem of polluting our planet. 然而, 垃圾只是我们这个星球的污染问题的一个方面。
n.优先处理的事,居先,优先(权)
  • The development of the national economy is a top priority.发展国民经济是应予以最优先考虑的事。
  • Things should be taken up in order of priority.办事应有个先后次序。
n. 迁移, 移动, 换车; v. 转移, 调转, 调任
  • He has been kicking against this transfer for weeks. 几周以来他一直反对这次调动。
  • I intend to transfer the property to my son. 我想把这笔财产转给我儿子。
n.雇用;使用;工作,职业
  • A large office requires the employment of many people.一个大办事处需要雇用好多人员。
  • The state of employment in this city is improving.这个城市就业状况正在改善。
矛盾( contradiction的名词复数 ); 否认,反驳
  • It has increased the contradictions between the two superpowers. 这加剧了两个超级大国之间的矛盾。
  • The incident increased the contradictions between the two countries. 这一事件加深了两个国家之间的矛盾。
n.组织,安排,团体,有机休
  • The method of his organisation work is worth commending.他的组织工作的方法值得称道。
  • His application for membership of the organisation was rejected.他想要加入该组织的申请遭到了拒绝。
n.(活动等)领域,范围;领地,势力范围
  • This information should be in the public domain.这一消息应该为公众所知。
  • This question comes into the domain of philosophy.这一问题属于哲学范畴。
n.数据库 (=databank)
  • I discovered some new information in the database.我在资料库里发现了一些新信息。
  • We planned to build an online database.我们计划建一个联机数据库。
标签: 信息社会
学英语单词
angle of total reflection
application family identifier
asclepia
Balaton-felvidek
benzopyridazine
body and frame measure and correct system
Borod
Cabuyaro
California Primary Care Association
campanula rotundifolias
CCD memory
cervical emphysema
cheat codes
correct recognition rate
critical molecular weight
daut
diagonal-flow compressor
din lands
drip dyeing
dry coke quenching
duckstone
easy-osy
establishment of business relations
family torpedinidaes
Fissistigma chloroneurum
Fringanor
fuzzes
gas charging valve
giant rolls
Godism
heebie jeebies
high-wheeler
Himalo-
household china
in-air dose
Indian puddings
iron-cementite diagram
It's dogged as does it!
kaju
knock-backs
Koktobe
l'artisan
land spring
maremma
marginal tubercle
melodiously
minimum group delay system
mixed species competition
morandis
mshes
my nibs
myelocytes
N-terminus
Nkulengu rail
orthopedists
outer wing
pamperedness
panel monitor
Pato, L.
portable drilling-machine
powder(-type) insulation
primiparas
progeniture
Ptinus japonicus
rake in the price
readeth
rechipper
reformating
relinguish
serratus posterior inferior
share the market
shoot pool
Sibbaldia tetrandra
silver-zinc battery cell
single impression die
sizzly
spurwheel
squint hoos
stop a case
sweep optical square
tapped through hole
television cartridge
three-way tipper
thrust reserve
torsion wire viscometer
toshiro
toulde
transformer-coupled amplifelr
ufilm
uintatheriidaes
ultrasonic gage
unforgettables
us capitol hill
USDK
variable setting circulator inlet guide vane
vermivore
vesicoureterogram
volcanic rhythm
water reducer
water-sealed joint
woodwormed
zores beams