TEXT C In April 1995, a young
Chinese chemistry student at Beijing University lay dying in a Beijing hospital.
She was in a coma, and although her doctors had performed numerous tests, they
could not discover what was killing her. In desperation, a student friend posted
an SOS describing her symptoms to several medical bulletin boards and mailing
lists on the Internet. Around the world, doctors who regularly checked these
electronic bulletin boards and lists responded immediately. In
Washington D. C. , Do, John Aldis, a physician with the U.S. Department of
State, saw the message from China. Using the Internet, he forwarded the message
to colleagues in America. Soon an international group of doctors joined the e-
mail discussion. A diagnosis emerged -- the woman might have been poisoned with
thallium, a metal resembling lead. A Beijing laboratory confirmed this diagnosis
-- the thallium concentration in her body was an much as 1,000 times normal.
More e-mail communication followed, as treatment was suggested and then
adjusted. The woman slowly began to recover. Well over a year later, the
international medical community was still keeping tabs on her condition through
the electronic medium that saved her life. It’s 11: 30 p. m. ,
you’re is San Francisco on business, and you want to check for messages at your
office in Virginia. First you dial in and get your voice mail. Next you plug
your portable computer into the hotel-room telephone jack, hit a few keys, and
pick up e-mall from a potential client in South Africa, your sister in London,
and a business associate in Detroit. Before writing your response, you do a
quick bit of search on the Internet, tracking down the name of the online news
group you had mentioned to the man in Detroit and the title of a book you wanted
to recommend to your sister. A few more keystrokes and in moments your
electronic letters have reached London and Detroit. Then, knowing that the time
difference means the next workday has begun in South Africa, you call there
without a second thought. These stories reflect society’s
increasing reliance on system of global communication that can link you equally
easily with someone in the next town or halfway around the world. The expanded
telephone-line capacity that has allowed the growth of these forms of
communication is a recent phenomenon. The United States has enjoyed domestic
telephone service for more than a century, but overseas telephone calls were
difficult until relatively recently. For a number of years after World War Ⅱ,
calls to Europe or Asia retied on short-wave radio signals. It sometimes took an
operator hours to set up a 3- minute call , and if you got through, the
connection was often noisy. In 1956, the first transatlantic
copper wire cable allowed simultaneous transmission of 36 telephone
conversations -- a cause for celebration then, a small number today. Other
cables followed; by the early 1960s, overseas telephone calls had reached 5
million per year. Then came satellite communication in the middle 1960s, and by
1980, the telephone system carried some 200 million overseas calls per year. But
as demands on the telecommunication system continued to increase, the
limitations of current technology became apparent. Then, in 1988, the first
transatlantic fiber-optic cable was laid, and the "information superhighway" was
on its way to becoming reality. Optical fibers form the backbone
of the global telecommunication system stronger, length for length, than steel
-- were designed to carry the vast amounts of data that can be transmitted via a
relatively new form of light-tightly focused laser. Together, lasers and optical
fibers have dramatically increased the capacity of the international telephone
system. A typical fiber-optic cable made up of 100 or more such fibers can carry
more than 40,000 voice channels. With equally striking improvements in
computing, the new communication technology has fueled the exponential growth of
the phenomenon known as the Internet. The first two paragraphs tell us a true story of ______.
A.international cooperation via the Internet B.how dangerous thallium can be to humans C.how one can get help from the Internet D.the girl’s recovery from thallium poisoning