考研英語 學英語,練聽力,上聽力課堂! 注冊 登錄
> 考研英語 > 考研英語閱讀 >  內容

《考研英語閱讀理解100篇 基礎版》第3章 信息技術類 Unit 36

所屬教程:考研英語閱讀

瀏覽:

2019年01月11日

手機版
掃描二維碼方便學習和分享

Sometimes it seems as if Google has never come across an industry it doesn’t want to disrupt.Best known for its hugely popular search engine,the Internet giant has spread its tentacles into an ever-growing array of businesses,including advertising,telecoms and,most recently,digital-navigation software.The company's habit of selling services cheaply or giving them away for free has endeared it to consumers.But its tactics have enraged competitors,who complain their new rival is out to destroy the economics of entire industries. 
Such griping has been loudest in the worlds of publishing and entertainment.Although media companies are hooked on the money they mint via adverts that run on Google and its YouTube video-streaming business,many of them also accuse the search firm of commoditising their content and of undermining their profits by making it easy for marketers to track the effectiveness of online ad spend.“You’re fucking with the magic,” says the boss of one big media company to Google's founders in a memorable scene recounted at the start of Ken Auletta's new book. 
Mr Auletta,an American journalist and long-time commentator on the media industry,dismisses claims that Google's programming wizards are to blame for putting a jinx on the media world.Instead,he places the blame squarely,and correctly,on the publishing and movie executives who failed to appreciate the speed with which the Internet would sap their companies’ fortunes.They were also slow to spot that,although Google presented itself as a friend,it had all the hallmarks of a powerful enemy too.Now the frenemy has become a scapegoat for many of the industry's self-inflicted wounds. 
Mr Auletta does a respectable job of reviewing the media companies’ predicaments.He also rehearses some of the well-known elements of Google's culture that have helped transform it from a start-up launched in a garage 11 years ago to a colossus with ambitions to become the world's first media company with revenues of $100 billion.Among other things,these include lavish stock options,perks such as free meals and massages,and a rigorous and sometimes quirky recruitment process. 
More compelling are the book's insights into the relationship between the members of the triumvirate that runs Google—Mr Brin,Larry Page,his co-founder,and Eric Schmidt,the chief executive,who arrived at Google several years after its launch.Brought in at the behest of venture capitalists that have backed the firm,Mr Schmidt found himself treading a delicate path between the sensibilities of the brilliant but socially awkward founders and the demands of the impatient financiers.With the help of a veteran Silicon Valley executive who acts as a coach,the three men ultimately developed an effective working relationship. 
Which is just as well,for Google now faces some formidable challenges.Fast-growing social networks such as Facebook are after a much bigger chunk of online ad dollars.And Google's size has begun to attract the attention of anti-trust watchdogs in areas such as digital book scanning,where it has ambitious plans.This hardly amounts to the end of Google's dominance as we know it.But if the company misplays its hand,it could turn out to be the beginning of the end. 
注(1):本文選自Economist; 
注(2):本文習題命題模仿對象:第1~5題分別模仿2002年真題Text 4第1、2題,Text 2第2題和Text 3第4、5題。 
1.From the passage we can infer that ______. 
A) media companies are blind to the benefit brought by Google 
B) business response towards Google's practice is in sharply contrast with that of consumers 
C) Google is to be blamed for reducing the profit of most media companies 
D) Google tends to disrupt every industry it touches upon 
2.Which of the following statements is TRUE according to the text? 
A) Google barely intends to be friends with other media companies. 
B) Google is currently generating an annual revenue of $100 billion. 
C) Media companies should blame themselves for their decline. 
D) Google's triumvirate management structure poses a disadvantage to the company's operation. 
3.The word“jinx”(Line 2,Paragraph 3)most probably means ______. 
A) disadvantage 
B) competition 
C) dilemma 
D) bad luck 
4.We can conclude from the text that ______. 
A) Ken Auletta shows a professional insight in this book 
B) Ken Auletta writes this book from a subjective perspective 
C) Ken Auletta demonstrates a pessimistic view on Google's future 
D) Ken Auletta writes this book to defend Google 
5.The author's attitude towards Ken Auletta's new book seems to be ______. 
A) positive 
B) negative 
C) doubtful 
D) uncertain 

Google有時看起來像是從未遇到過它不想涉足的行業(yè)。這家網絡巨頭最為人所知的是其廣受歡迎的搜索引擎,它還把觸角伸向了越來越多的領域,包括廣告、電信以及最近涉足的數字導航軟件。該公司一貫以提供低價甚至免費的服務而深受用戶歡迎。但其經營戰(zhàn)略卻激怒了它的競爭者,他們抱怨這個新來的對手就是存心要把整個行業(yè)搞垮。 
這種怨言在出版業(yè)和娛樂業(yè)尤甚。雖然媒體公司貪戀通過在Google及其擁有的YouTube流媒體業(yè)務上投放廣告獲得的收益,其中許多公司還是指責Google使其內容變得商品化,同時也減少了他們的利潤,因為Google使得市場營銷人員能輕易了解網絡廣告投入的成效。一家大媒體公司的老板對Google的聯合創(chuàng)始人說:“你在糟蹋這種魔力。”這一幕令人印象深刻的場景被肯·奧萊塔記錄在了新書的開頭。 
奧萊塔是美國記者,同時也是媒體行業(yè)的資深評論員,他駁斥了Google的編程奇才是給媒體業(yè)帶來災難的元兇的說法。事實上他公正且正確地指出,真正應該負責的是出版和電影業(yè)的主管們,他們沒能正確意識到互聯網將以怎樣的速度消耗他們公司的未來。他們也太晚才發(fā)現,盡管Google以盟友形象出現,它卻具有一個強敵的所有標志。現在這位友敵成為了替罪羊,媒體業(yè)將許多自己造成的錯誤歸咎于它。 
奧萊塔先生做了一項可敬的工作:回顧了媒體公司的困境。他還推演了Google文化中一些廣為人知的要素,這些要素幫助Google從11年前在小車庫中創(chuàng)辦的小公司發(fā)展成為現在的大型企業(yè),志在成為年收入1000億美金的全球頭號媒體公司。除其他方面以外,這些要素包括豐厚的認股權、免費餐和按摩等福利,以及嚴謹而有時怪異的招聘程序。 
更吸引讀者的是本書探究了Google三巨頭之間的關系——布林、聯合創(chuàng)始人拉里·佩奇,以及Google成立幾年之后才加入的首席執(zhí)行官埃里克·施密特。施密特進入Google是應支持該公司的風險投資者邀請,他發(fā)現自己要小心地維護兩位才華洋溢卻不善交際的創(chuàng)始人與急迫的投資人之間的敏感關系。在一位資深硅谷主管的指導幫助下,三人最終形成了一種有效的合作關系。 
這是件好事,因為Google現在面臨一些艱巨的挑戰(zhàn)。快速發(fā)展的社交網如Facebook正在尋求更大數額的在線廣告資金。而且Google的規(guī)模在一些領域已經開始引起了反壟斷監(jiān)督部門的注意,例如它希望一展宏圖的電子書掃描領域。據我們所知,這幾乎不能等同于Google統(tǒng)治地位的終結。但如果Google一著出錯,就有可能成為終結的導火索。 
用戶搜索

瘋狂英語 英語語法 新概念英語 走遍美國 四級聽力 英語音標 英語入門 發(fā)音 美語 四級 新東方 七年級 賴世雄 zero是什么意思福州市中茂岱湖城英語學習交流群

  • 頻道推薦
  • |
  • 全站推薦
  • 推薦下載
  • 網站推薦