单词:special software
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LESSON 8 VISITING A SOFTWARE COMPANY Dashan: Hello, I have an appointment with Mr Parker. My name is Dashan. 大山:你好,我约好要见帕克先生,我叫大山。 Receptionist: Mr Parker. Mr Dashan is here. 接待员:帕克先生,大山先生到了。 Glen: Dashan, long t
EXPLORATIONS -January 9, 2002: Software Theft By Paul Thompson Pirated computer software VOICE ONE: This is Sarah Long. VOICE TWO: And this is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English program EXPLORAT
Its easy to think of computer as just machinery: buttons, screens and parts that work together. But the magic of computers comes from something makes them unique to you. This is Computer Software In Plain English. The problem with computers is that m
[00:13.51]Reading [00:17.35]ELIAS'STORY [00:21.60]My name is Elias.I am a poor black worker in South Africa. [00:29.47]The time when I first met Nelson Mandela was a very difficult period of my life. [00:37.64]I was twelve years old. [00:41.40]It was
[00:20.42]史蒂文Jobs(Steven Jobs) [00:34.14]词汇扫描 [00:38.43]obsession 着迷 [00:43.12]considerable 相当多的 [00:49.81]Jobs ran NeXT with an obsession for aesthetic perfection, [00:54.15]as evidenced by such things [00:56.16]as the NeXT Cube's mag
EXPLORATIONS - Computer Software Theft By Paul Thompson Broadcast: Wednesday, September 29, 2004 (MUSIC) VOICE ONE: This is Faith Lapidus. VOICE TWO: Software is easy to copy. This is why software the
By Kari Barber Dakar 21 March 2008 In many African countries, few people have access to computers and the Internet. Experts say this is hindering development and preventing students from being able to compete for jobs. At a conference in Dakar this w
Economics Report - For Fans of Anarchy, Grand Theft Auto IV Is a Big Smash Popularity of video game series makes Take-Two Interactive a takeover target. Transcript of radio broadcast: 16 May 2008 This is the VOA Special English Economics Report. (SO
Photo: VOA photo - Pos Laput A vendor sells pirated DVDs in Vietnam Despite some gains in fighting copyright infringement in many countries, brazen piracy remains visible in Asia. In a scene found in many Asian cities, pirated movies, music and softw
India has criticized a ban imposed by the U.S. state of Ohio on outsourcing of government projects to offshore locations. India feels this signals the rise of protectionist sentiment in the U.S. The global recession had reduced the flow of outsourcin
New Software Tells Who's in the Forest and Who Isn't If you listen closely to a recording of a rainforest in Puerto Rico, you probably will not be able to count how many frogs you hear. Unfortunately, one of those frogs - the one with the really high
When I was a kid, I had never heard of software. If someone showed me this word, I would have no idea what it meant. Today, of course, its probably one of our most commonly used words. We cant live nowadays without software. We need an operating syst
China's software outsourcing industry is considerably smaller than its much-heralded counterpart in India but it is growing fast, and unlike Indian firms, many Chinese companies are working on cutting-edge product development for the world's major te
At a recent Sacramento PC User's Group meeting, a company was demonstratingits latest speech-recognition software. A representative from the company was just about ready to start the demonstration and asked everyone in the room to quiet down. Just th
BEIJING, Aug. 27 (Xinhua) -- The software industry garnered more than 1.3 trillion yuan (205 billion U.S. dollars) in revenues in the first seven months of this year, up 25.4 percent year on year, government data showed Monday. The fast revenue growt
BEIJING, July 17 (Xinhua) -- A senior Chinese copyright official said on Tuesday that foreign providers received equal treatment during a massive government procurement of licensed software. From late 2010, the Chinese central and provincial governme
The computer that solves the puzzle publishes its solution to the rest of the network and collects its reward: new bitcoins. 解开了谜题的计算机便把结果发布到互联网上,并获得新的比特币作为奖励。 And in the act of solv
This is the VOA Special English Technology Report. A new study looks at privacy in a world where computers can increasingly recognize faces in a crowd or online. Alessandro Acquisti at Carnegie Mellon University's Heinz College in Pittsburgh, Pennsyl