大学英语六级131及答案解析.doc
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1、大学英语六级 131 及答案解析(总分:448.01,做题时间:132 分钟)一、Part I Writing (3(总题数:1,分数:30.00)1.For this part,you are allowed 30 minutes to write a LetterYou should write at least 150 words according to the outline given below in Chinese; 假设你是你们学校的学生会主席,请代表学生会起草一份倡议书,号召全校同学行动起来,为环保运动做出自己的努力。同时下周六学校将组织同学在全市进行环保宣传活动,征召志愿
2、者到校学生会报名。 (分数:30.00)_二、Part II Reading C(总题数:1,分数:71.00)The Real Death Of Print Vishwas Chavan travels a lot. As an informatician, he collects data on what types of animal live where in India to enter into a biodiversity database. Yet the specimens he hunts for have neither fur nor feathers, but yel
3、lowing pages and ageing dust-jackets. Much of the information Chavan seeks is in old, out of-print tomes that are scattered around the world; about 2,500 of the 7,000 books he has unearthed were written in the first half of the nineteenth century. To find them, Chavan has spent years trailing around
4、 libraries. He dreams of the day when books such as these are scanned and made available as digital files on the Internet. Chavan and other digitization visionaries paint a future in which books no longer gather dust on shelves, but exist as interconnected nodes in a vast web of stored literature, a
5、ll accessible at the click of a mouse. So instead of hunting for specific books, scholars could search for specific information, customizing searches to suit their needs. A few years ago, Chavans dream seemed little more than a castle in the air. True, a number of mostly volunteer-driven or publicly
6、 funded projects had been scanning books and making them freely available on the Internet. But most efforts were limited. In December 2004, the Internet searchengine company Google announced plans to change that. It said it would scan millions of books from five major libraries: the university libra
7、ries of Oxford, Harvard, Stanford and Michigan, and the New York Public Library. The announcement energized other organizations in the United States and in Europe, which soon declared similar plans to scan and catalogue millions of books. The move to digitize books is set to transform the worlds of
8、publishers, librarians, authors, readers and researchers. Obscure specialist titles could find new readerships; librarians and information specialists will have to develop tools to catalogue and navigate this labyrinth (迷宫) of data; and authors and publishers may soon have to start thinking in digit
9、al dimensions, just as website designers and writers already do. Bloody revolution But revolutions are rarely bloodless and this one could soon get ugly. In the United States authors and publishers are squaring up against Google for a legal fight over copyright. Opinion is divided over whether the s
10、canning projects being implemented by companies such as Google and Amazon will hand control of the worlds literature to private enterprise and, if so, what this could mean. And with several independent scanning projects under way, it is still not clear how much of the information will be freely avai
11、lable, or where and how it can all be coordinated and accessed. The idea to digitize books and make them available online has been around since the beginning of Internet in the early 1970s. When the US Declaration of Independence was typed in and sent to everyone on a computer network on the night o
12、f 4 July 1971, it marked the birth of Project Gutenberg, the first book-digitization venture. Since then, the projects 20,000 volunteers have scanned or typed in about 50,000 out-of copyright books, says its founder Michael Hart, who works in the basement of his home in Urbana, Illinois, and, like t
13、he projects volunteers, for free. Projects such as this are driven by the idealistic desire to make knowledge and literature freely accessible to all, but also by the benefits of having book collections easily searchable. “Being able to find it online is pretty much the same as having it online,“ sa
14、ys David Weinberger of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. Assets such as searchability have prompted the National Science Foundation (NSF) in Arlington, Virginia, to get involved in an open-access enterprise called the Million Book Project. This is an international scanning effort with man
15、y participants, including Carnegie Mellon University. Since the project began in 2002, about 600,000 out-of-copyright books have been scanned, although only about half of them are currently available online. The scanning takes place in India and China, with books being shipped there temporarily from
16、 libraries around the world. Made to fit Searchability is also the main driving force behind commercial plans to scan books, including texts whose copyright has yet to expire. For example, if their products have been digitized, online booksellers can allow customers to search within books and browse
17、 a few pages before deciding to buy. In the United States, with the publishers permission, Amazon puts searchable digital data from mostly copyrighted books online. Amazon says that several hundred thousand books are currently available for searching. Amazon also offers the option of purchasing e-bo
18、oks and e-documents on its website, which can be viewed after downloading them to a portable reading device. The company expects these services to drive additional sales. Its search inside the book feature increases sales by 8%, the company says. Scientific publishers, such as the US National Academ
19、ies Press also see increased print sales when they allow their books to be viewed online. But Google doesnt mention money in its announcement that it plans to make the contents of millions of copyrighted books searchable as part of its Google Book Search project. Its spokesman, Nate Tyler, says Goog
20、les motivation is to include literature that is currently only available offline in its mission to make information universally accessible. But the possibility that the company could gain financially from the move has raised hackles among US authors and publishing organizations. In the autumn of thi
21、s year, the Authors Guild and the Association of American Publishers filed a lawsuit against Google for copyright infringement. They complained that Google hadnt asked them for permission to scan copyrighted books. Google has obtained the go-ahead from publishers to include some copyrighted works as
22、 part of its Book Search project, but not all. It argues that it does not need to seek permission for every book, because what it plans to do is permissible according to the “fair use“ exception of US copyright law. This allows copying for uses such as teaching, scholarship or research. Google will,
23、 for example, not make the full text available, but only show “snippets“ of text around the search results if a book is still copyrighted. The company says that people are more likely to buy or borrow a book if they can search it this way, adding that the snippets are similar to the card catalogues
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