未分类题

The paperless office is not a dream, it is a jokE.Today more gadgets(小器具) are devoted to spattering more paper with more ink than ever beforE.At last a Japanese manufacturer of office equipment, Ricoh, is trying to reverse the trenD.(46)The age of the recycling non-violent shredder may be about to dawn.
(47)The new machine sprays on a chemical to loosen the toner&39;s grip, applies a little heat and then uses a sticky roller to peel the toner(增色剂) off,
Using this technology, a single sheet of paper can be recycled 10 or 20 times, depending on its durability. And as well as eliminating bins full of waste paper, the machine could silence &39;the shredder.(48)The result would not fool the experts in a forensic(法医) laboratory, but is might well suffice for low-level security.
(49)The prototype cleans only three pages a minutE.Ricoh has yet to show it can make erasing old paper cheaper than buying new. And only the toner is removed: the ma chine cannot wipe out marks made by dot matrix printer or thermal-paper fax machines. (50)This means that text or figures produced with a laser printer could be altered, but letterheads and signatures on the same piece of paper would be left intact.
(46)
A.More work is requireD.B.Anyone concerned about secrecy could erase his message rather than reduce it to tangles of shredded paper.C.He has developed a machine that takes in printed paper and spits out clean white sheets.D.The new machine can tear paper sheets into pieces.E.Pen strokes and impressions made with ordinary printing presses are also immunE.F.Most photocopiers, laser printers and plain-paper fax machines make their marks with toner, which is melted on to the surface of the paper.
(47)
A.More work is requireD.B.Anyone concerned about secrecy could erase his message rather than reduce it to tangles of shredded paper.C.He has developed a machine that takes in printed paper and spits out clean white sheets.D.The new machine can tear paper sheets into pieces.E.Pen strokes and impressions made with ordinary printing presses are also immunE.F.Most photocopiers, laser printers and plain-paper fax machines make their marks with toner, which is melted on to the surface of the paper.
(48)
A.More work is requireD.B.Anyone concerned about secrecy could erase his message rather than reduce it to tangles of shredded paper.C.He has developed a machine that takes in printed paper and spits out clean white sheets.D.The new machine can tear paper sheets into pieces.E.Pen strokes and impressions made with ordinary printing presses are also immunE.F.Most photocopiers, laser printers and plain-paper fax machines make their marks with toner, which is melted on to the surface of the paper.
(49)
A.More work is requireD.B.Anyone concerned about secrecy could erase his message rather than reduce it to tangles of shredded paper.C.He has developed a machine that takes in printed paper and spits out clean white sheets.D.The new machine can tear paper sheets into pieces.E.Pen strokes and impressions made with ordinary printing presses are also immunE.F.Most photocopiers, laser printers and plain-paper fax machines make their marks with toner, which is melted on to the surface of the paper.
(50)
A.More work is requireD.B.Anyone concerned about secrecy could erase his message rather than reduce it to tangles of shredded paper.C.He has developed a machine that takes in printed paper and spits out clean white sheets.D.The new machine can tear paper sheets into pieces.E.Pen strokes and impressions made with ordinary printing presses are also immunE.F.Most photocopiers, laser printers and plain-paper fax machines make their marks with toner, which is melted on to the surface of the paper.
请帮忙给出每个问题的正确答案和分析,谢谢!

A.(47)The
B.(48)The
C.
(49)The
D.
(46)
A.E.B.
F.C.
G.D.
H.E.
I.F.
J.
(47)
A.K.B.
L.C.
M.D.
N.E.
O.F.
P.
(48)
A.Q.B.
R.C.
S.D.
T.E.
U.F.
V.
(49)
A.W.B.
X.C.
Y.D.
Z.E.
[.F.
.
(50)
A.].B.
^.C.
_.D.
`.E.
A.F.
B.

【参考答案】

问题 1 答案解析:
C ;句意:他发明了一种机器,能输入有字的纸,而输出空白的纸。这与上文所说“一位日本办公室......

(↓↓↓ 点击下方‘点击查看答案’看完整答案 ↓↓↓)
热门 试题

未分类题
obal IndustrializationIndustrialization changed the worlD.Few places on earth have escaped its impact. However, the nature of the impact varies from place to placE.Understanding the global consequences of industrialization requires an understanding of how industrialization differed in each placE.Industrialization is always initially a regional, not a national, phenomenon as demonstrated by the long industrial lag of the American South. Many other parts of Western Europe plus the United States followed Britain in the early 19th century. A few other European regions -- Sweden, Holland, northern Italy -- began serious industrialization only at mid-century. The next big wave of new industrialization, beginning around the 1880s, embraced Russia and Japan. A final round (to present) included the rapid industrialization of the rest of the Pacific Rim (especially South Korea and Taiwan) by the 1960s.Various factors shaped the nature of industrialization in each placE.In Britain, for example, industrialization succeeded when it depended on individual inventors and relatively small companies. It began to lag, however, in the corporate climate of the later 19th century. In contrast, Germany surged forward when industrialization featured larger organizations, more impersonal management structures, and collaborative research rather than artisan-tinkerers. In Germany, the state was also more directly involved in industrialization than in Britain.French industrialization emphasized updated craft products. This reflected not only earlier national specialties, but also less adequate resources in coal, a factor that held heavy industry back. Furniture workers, for example, used pre-set designs to turn out furniture quickly, but they resented dilutions of their artistic skill. The United States' industrialization depended on immigrant labor. Unlike Germany, however, the United States introduced laws that combated businesses big enough to throttle competition, though the impact of these laws was uneven. The United States with its huge market also pioneered the new economic stage of mass consumerism that ultimately had a worldwide impact.The consequences of industrialization are, ultimately, global. By the early 19th century, Europe's factories pushed back more traditional manufacturing in areas like Latin America and IndiA.At the same time, industrial centers sought new food resources and raw materials, prompting these sectors to expand in places like Chile and Brazil.Gradually, however, other societies copied industrialization or at least developed an independent industrial sector. Much of 20th-century world history, in fact, involves efforts by societies like India, China, Iran, or Brazil to reduce their dependence on imports and mount a selective export operation through industry. Industrialization's environmental impact has also been international. Industrialization quickly affected local water and air quality around factories. Industrial demands for agricultural products, like robber, caused deforestation and soil changes in places like Brazil. These patterns have accelerated as industrial growth has spread more widely, creating modern issues such as global warming. The world impact of industrialization, in these senses, remains an unfinished story as the 21st century begins.Given the global impact of industrialization, it is increasingly important that we understand its nature and its consequences. Whereas the impact of industrialization is easy to understand on a personal level -- how it affects where and how we work or live our lives -- it is more difficult to understand its nature on a global level, particularly when its global pattern is so complex. History provides a means toward this understanding. By understanding the causes, the variations, and the historic consequ
A.B.
C.
D.
E.
F.