TEXT D The three biggest lies in
American are: (1)" The check is in the mail." (2)" Of course I’ 11 respect you
in the morning." (3)" It was a computer error." Of these three
little white lies, the worst of the lot by far is the third. It’ s the only one
that can never be true. Today, if a bank statement cheats you out of $900 that
way, you know what the clerk is sure to say:" It was a computer error."
Nonsense. The computer is reporting nothing more than what the clerk typed into
it. The most irritating case of all is when the computerized
cash register in the grocery store shows that an item costs more than it
actually does. If the innocent buyer points out the mistake, the checker,
bagger, and manger all come together and offer the familiar explanation:" It was
a computer error." It wasn’t, of course. That high-tech cash
register is really nothing more than an electric eye. The eye reads the
Universal Product Code-that ribbon of black and white lines in a comer of the
package-and then checks the code against a price list stored in memory. If the
price list is right, you’ I1 be charged accurately. Grocery
stores update the price list each day-that is, somebody sits at a keyboard and
types in the prices. If the price typed in is too high, there are only two
explanations: carelessness or dishonesty. But somehow" a computer error" is
supposed to excuse everything. One reason we let people hide
behind a computer is the common misperception that huge, modem computers are"
electric brains" with" artificial intelligence." At some point there might be a
machine with intelligence, but none exists today. The smartest computer on Earth
right now is no more" intelligent" than your average screwdriver. At this point
in the development of computers, the only thing any machine can do is what a
human has instructed it to do. Which of the following describes the main idea of the passage
A.Computers are stupid and inefficient. B.Computer errors are basically human errors. C.Computer can help department stores update the price list. D.Supermarket price errors are often made through dishonesty.