[考研类试卷]考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷51及答案与解析.doc
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1、考研英语(阅读)模拟试卷 51 及答案与解析Part ADirections: Read the following four texts. Answer the questions below each text by choosing A, B, C or D. (40 points)0 In the 1930s, an American meat company came out with a spiced ham product sold in a can. Before long, Spam, as it was called, became ubiquitous. However,
2、 critics called it a food with “no nutritive or aesthetic value“. Now, some high-tech observers say that unsolicited E-mail is the electronic equivalent. (1)_But, its more than just aesthetically displeasing. “The big problem with spam is that it is a cost shifted medium, which is to say that the pe
3、rson who receives the E-mail has to pay for it, “ says Tom Geller, founder of the SpamCon Foundation, a coalition of marketers and computer users, who want to control the number of unsolicited messages that are sent over the Internet. (2)_According to Tom Geller, some Internet service providers esti
4、mate that spam accounts for up to 10% of their operational costs. “Of course, they pass those operational costs on to you. The other problem with unsolicited E-mail is that when you send a piece of paper mail, you have to pay for it, “ he says. “So, it doesnt pay for marketers to send out millions a
5、nd millions of pieces. But with E-mail, since the senders dont pay for it, they tend to send it out in tens of millions. As a result, you end up with hundreds, possibly even thousands of unsolicited E-mails in your mail box, making E-mail essentially useless for you. “Attempts have been made to cont
6、rol the volume. “There are legal regulations in at least five countries and at least 16 U.S. states, “ says Mr. Geller. “The five countries that I know about are Denmark, Germany, Italy, Austria and Finland. (3)_ But the problem is that many spammers are using untraceable E-mail addresses and basica
7、lly try to hide their origins so theres no way to tell them to stop.“And Tom Geller says there isnt much the average Internet users can do about spam. “They can delete the message and curse, which is what I think most people do, “ he says. “People who know a little bit more about anti-spam issues so
8、metimes use the utility known as spam, cop, which is at spamcop. net. (4)_When the person finds out, when the Internet service provider finds out that they are hosting a spammer, almost invariably they will kick them off because no Internet service provider wants a spammer on their system. “(5)_ “Th
9、e first is technical. This is already happening, “ he says. “A second way is through legal measures. When there are penalties for spamming and there are at least warnings that people realize that: hey, Im doing something illegal. I think that will keep many people who are not professional criminals
10、from spamming, but I think that the third way that spam can be cut down is essentially for social and policy reasons, for more people to realize exactly how E-mail works and how it is a recipient-pays medium. I think that will cause a certain amount of peer pressure. “A While Tom Geller doesnt think
11、 that spam will ever be completely eliminated, he does believe that it could be cut down by a combination of three types of activities.B The new Office package is also closely linked to the Internet, and includes a feature called smart tags which permits word-processing documents to be connected dir
12、ectly to information stored on the Internet. And Office XP makes it easier to access E-mail.C According to America Online, a major Internet service provider, approximately a third of the estimated 30 million E-mail messages sent each day can be classified as spam.D Lets say you want to organize an e
13、vent, or a meeting. Right now you send out a bunch of E-mails back and forth, editing the things. Its not very organized. Now you can easily create a web site where everybody goes to get the documents.E Thats a utility that lets you complain, supposedly to the Internet service provider that allows t
14、he messages to be sent. Not the senders of the messages, but the person who gives them connectivity.F Many of the laws in the United States are fairly weak. They say, for example, that when somebody send you spam you have to tell them to stop before the law kicks in.G Unlike unsolicited mail, paper
15、mail which is perfectly fine, and unsolicited phone calls which some people have problems with, but dont cost anything, when you receive E-mail it is taking up your computer resources and your bandwidth.5 The U. S. space agency, NASA, is planning to launch a satellite that scientists hope will answe
16、r fundamental questions about the origin and destiny of our universe. (1)_The prevailing theory of the universes origin, the “Big Bang“ theory, says all matter and energy were once compressed into a tiny point. The density and resulting temperature were so enormous that, about 13-to-15-billion years
17、 ago by current estimates, a mighty explosion flung the matter hurtling outward in all directions. (2) _They also ask, is the expansion accelerating? Will the universe collapse? What is its shape? Scientists will seek explanations with NASAs new Microwave Anisotropy Probe, abbreviated as MAP. (3)_“M
18、AP will take the ultimate baby picture, an image of the infant universe taken in the fossil light that is still present from the Big Bang, “ he says. “This glow, this radiation, is the oldest light in the universe. Imprinted on this background, physicists knew, would be the secrets of the Big Bang i
19、tself. “This background radiation is the light and heat that the early cosmic soup of matter emitted. Once roiling hot, it has cooled over the eons to just a few degrees above absolute zero. It was once thought to be distributed evenly. But in 1992, a highly sensitive NASA satellite named COBE detec
20、ted nearly imperceptible variations in temperature as tiny as 30-millionths of a degree.(4)_“These patterns result from tiny concentrations that were in the very early universe that were the seeds that grew to become the stars and the galaxies that we see today, “ he says. “The tiny patterns in the
21、light hold the keys for understanding the history, the content, the shape, and the ultimate fate of our universe.“(5)_Princeton University scientist David Spergel says MAP will give us a much more accurate matter count than we have now. “Right now, we want to measure something like the matter-densit
22、y of the universe, “ he says. “Today, we can estimate that to a factor of two. Thats pretty good. What we want to do is be able to measure it to about the three-percent level, which is what MAP will be capable of doing.“To do its job, the $ 145 million MAP spacecraft will settle into an orbit 1.5 mi
23、llion kilometers from the Earth. This is where the Earths and suns gravitational pull are equal, and well past the range of the Earths own obscuring microwave radiation.While the older COBE satellite measured just a small part of the sky, Charles Bennett says MAP will scan the entire sky at 1, 000 t
24、imes better resolution. “The patterns that MAP measures are extremely difficult to measure, “ he says. “MAP will be measuring millionths of a degree temperature accuracies, and thats hard to do. Thats like measuring the difference between two cups of sand to the accuracy of a single grain of sand. “
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