首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
(1) "Like Florence in the Renaissance. " That is a common description of what it is like to live in Silicon Valley. America’s
(1) "Like Florence in the Renaissance. " That is a common description of what it is like to live in Silicon Valley. America’s
admin
2021-11-24
29
问题
(1) "Like Florence in the Renaissance. " That is a common description of what it is like to live in Silicon Valley. America’s technology capital has an outsize influence on the world’s economy, stockmarkets and culture. This small portion of land running from San Jose to San Francisco is home to three of the world’s five most valuable companies. Giants such as Apple, Facebook, Google and Netflix all claim Silicon Valley as their birthplace and home, as do trailblazers (先驱) such as Airbnb, Tesla and Uber. The Bay Area has the 19th-largest economy in the world, ranking above Switzerland and Saudi Arabia.
(2) The Valley is not just a place. It is also an idea. Ever since Bill Hewlett and David Packard set up in a garage nearly 80 years ago, it has been a byword (代名词) for innovation and ingenuity. It has been at the centre of several cycles of Schumpeterian (熊彼特的) destruction and regeneration, in silicon chips, personal computers, software and internet services. Some of its inventions have been ludicrous: internet-connected teapots, or an app that sold people coins to use at laundromats (自助洗衣店). But others are world-beaters: microprocessor chips, databases and smartphones all trace their lineage to the Valley.
(3) Its combination of engineering expertise, thriving business networks, deep pools of capital, strong universities and a risk-taking culture have made the Valley impossible to clone, despite many attempts to do so. There is no credible rival for its position as the world’s pre-eminent innovation hub. But there are signs that the Valley’s influence is peaking. If that were simply a symptom of much greater innovation elsewhere, it would be cause for cheer. The truth is unhappier.
(4) First, the evidence that something is changing. Last year more Americans left the county of San Francisco than arrived. According to a recent survey, 46% of respondents say they plan to leave the Bay Area in the next few years, up from 34% in 2016. So many startups (初创公司) are branching out into new places that the trend has a name, "Off Silicon Valleying". Peter Thiel, perhaps the Valley’s most high-profile (知名度高 的) venture capitalist, is among those upping sticks. Those who stay have broader horizons; in 2013 Silicon Valley investors put half their money into startups outside the Bay Area; now it is closer to two-thirds.
(5) The reasons for this shift are manifold, but chief among them is the sheer expense of the Valley. The cost of living is among the highest in the world. One founder reckons young startups pay at least four times more to operate in the Bay Area than in most other American cities. New technologies, from quantum computing to synthetic biology, offer lower margins than internet services, making it more important for startups in these emerging fields to husband their cash. All this is before taking into account the nastier features of Bay Area life: clogged traffic, discarded syringes (注射器) and shocking inequality.
(6) Other cities are rising in relative importance as a result. The Kauffman Foundation, a non-profit group that tracks entrepreneurship, now ranks the Miami-Fort Lauderdale area first for startup activity in America, based on the density of startups and new entrepreneurs. Mr Thiel is moving to Los Angeles, which has a vibrant tech scene. Phoenix and Pittsburgh have become hubs for autonomous vehicles; New York for media startups; London for fintech; Shenzhen for hardware. None of these places can match the Valley on its own; between them, they point to a world in which innovation is more distributed.
(7) If great ideas can bubble up in more places, that has to be welcome. There are some reasons to think the playing-field for innovation is indeed being levelled up. Capital is becoming more widely available to bright sparks everywhere; tech investors increasingly trawl the world, not just California, for hot ideas. There is less reason than ever for a single region to be the epicentre of technology. Thanks to the tools that the Valley’s own firms have produced, from smartphones to video calls to messaging apps, teams can work effectively from different offices and places. A more even distribution of wealth may be one result, greater diversity of thought another. The Valley does many things remarkably well, but it comes dangerously close to being a monoculture of white male nerds. Companies founded by women received just 2% of the funding doled out by venture capitalists last year.
(8) The problem is that the wider playing-field for innovation is also being levelled down. One issue is the dominance of the tech giants. Startups, particularly those in the consumer-internet business, increasingly struggle to attract capital in the shadow of Alphabet, Apple, Facebook et al. In 2017 the number of first financing rounds in America was down by around 22% from 2012. Alphabet and Facebook pay their employees so generously that startups can struggle to attract talent (the median salary at Facebook is $240,000). When the chances of startup success are even less certain and the payoffs not so very different from a steady job at one of the giants, dynamism suffers—and not just in the Valley. It is a similar story in China, where Alibaba, Baidu and Tencent are responsible for close to half of all domestic venture-capital investment, giving the giants a big say in the future of potential rivals.
(9) The second way in which innovation is being levelled down is by increasingly unfriendly policies in the West. Rising anti-immigrant sentiment and tighter visa regimes of the sort introduced by President Donald Trump have economy-wide effects; foreign entrepreneurs create around 25% of new companies in America. Silicon Valley first bloomed, in large part, because of government largesse (慷慨解囊). But state spending on public universities throughout America and Europe has fallen since the financial crisis of 2007 -2008. Funding for basic research is inadequate—America’s federal-government spending on R&D was 0.6% of GDP in 2015, a third of what it was in 1964—and heading in the wrong direction.
(10) If Silicon Valley’s relative decline heralded the rise of a global web of thriving, rival tech hubs, that would be worth celebrating. Unfortunately, the Valley’s peak looks more like a warning that innovation everywhere is becoming harder.
Silicon Valley is likened to Florence in the Renaissance for________.
选项
A、it has tremendously affected the global technology and art
B、it is the headquarters of the top three world’s most valuable companies
C、it is where companies like Airbnb, Tesla and Uber are established
D、it ranks above Switzerland and Saudi Arabia in overall competitiveness
答案
C
解析
推理判断题。根据题干提示定位至第一段。该段前两句提到人们经常把硅谷比作文艺复兴时期的佛罗伦萨。下文紧接着从四个方面分析了原因。该段第五句是原因之一:像苹果、脸谱网、谷歌和网飞这些巨头都声称硅谷是其发源地和总部所在地,像爱彼迎、特斯拉和优步这些行业先驱也是如此。原文中的as do trailblazers such as Airbnb,Tesla and Uber是as引导的方式状语从句,表示“像……一样”,也就是说,Airbnb、Tesla以及Uber和主句中提到的那些科技巨头一样,都声称硅谷是其发源地和总部所在地,故C为答案。第三句提到这座美国科技之都,即硅谷,对世界的经济、股市和文化均有巨大的影响,原文并未提到对全球技术和艺术是否有巨大的影响,故排除A;第四句提到从圣何塞到旧金山这一小部分土地,即硅谷,是全球市值最高的五大公司其中三家的总部所在地,而不是全球市值最高的三大公司的总部所在地,故排除B;最后一句提到旧金山湾区,即硅谷,拥有世界上第十九大经济体,名列瑞士和沙特阿拉伯之上,该句进行排名的是经济体的规模而不是综合竞争力,故排除D。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/KUkMFFFM
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
生活就像一杯红酒,热爱生活的人会从其中品出无穷无尽的美妙。将它握在手中仔细观察,它的暗红色中有血的感觉,那正是生命的痕迹。抿一口留在口中回味,它的甘甜中有一丝苦涩,如人生一般复杂迷离。喝一口下肚,余香沁人心脾,让人终身受益。红酒越陈越美味,生活越丰富越美好
雨后,韭菜叶上还往往带着雨时溅起的泥点。青菜摊子上的红红绿绿几乎有诗似的美丽。果子有不少是由西山与北山来的,西山的沙果,海棠,北山的黑枣,柿子,进了城还带着一层白霜儿呀!哼,美国的橘子包着纸;遇到北平的带霜儿的玉李,还不愧杀!是的,北平是个都城,而
PASSAGETHREEActually,whatisthekeytotheopportunityofpeopletomoveoutofAfrica?
A、Medicinepeoplewithinsomniacantake.B、Tipspeoplecanusetoimprovetheirsleep.C、Psychologicaltherapyusedtocuresle
HowtoConquerPublicSpeakingFearI.IntroductionA.Publicspeaking—acommonsourceofstressforeveryoneB.Thetruthabou
CharacteristicsqfAmericanCultureI.PunctualityA.Goingtothetheater:be【T1】______twentyminutesprior【T1】______B.
A、Hedoesn’tenjoythenatureverymuch.B、Hedoesn’tdowellingolf.C、Hehasbeendrinkingtoomuchbeer.D、Helovesgetting
(1)It’s7pmonabalmySaturdaynightinJune,andIhavejustorderedmyfirstbeerinICervejaria,arestaurantinZambujeir
择书比择友简单得多。不善辞令、厌恶应酬的人,可以自由自在地徜徉于书林之中,游目四顾,俯拾皆友。看书,可以博览,可以细嚼,没有人会怪你喜新厌旧,也没有人要求你从一而终。你大可以从一本换到另一本,喜爱的书,不妨一读再读;不耐看的书,又可随手抛下,谁也
鸿渐道:“我忘掉问你,你信上叫我‘同情兄’,那是什么意思?”辛楣笑道:“这是董斜川想出来的,他说,同跟一个先生念书的叫‘同师兄弟’,同在一个学校的叫‘同学’,同有一个情人的该叫‘同情’。”
随机试题
门窗玻璃安装应牢固,不得有()。
新建的开发区相对于城市的建成区来说有许多优势,为外资企业的投资提供了良好的条件,以下哪条没有充分体现其优势?
合同主体合格是指合同当事人具有()。
《著作权》法的主要内容不包括()。
股份有限公司的合并必须经国务院授权的部门或者省级人民政府批准。()
看涨期权购买者的收益为期权到期日市场价格和执行价格的差额。()
某公司专门从事劳务派遣业务。最近,该公司与某培训中心签订了一份劳务派遣协议,约定向其派遣20名教学辅助人员,分为两个周期,每个周期为1年,每个周期结束前订立新的劳务派遣协议。该公司根据这份协议,招收了20名被派遣劳动者,并与他们签订了劳动合同。然而,因招生
所有合伙企业的合伙人可以用货币、实物、劳务、知识产权、土地使用权或者其他财产权利出资。()
In1924America’sNationalResearchCouncilsenttwoengineerstosuperviseaseriesofindustrialexperimentsatalargeteleph
为了研究两种教学方法的效果,研究者选择了七对智商、年龄、阅读能力、家庭条件相近的儿童进行实验,结果见下表:根据上述资料,回答:(1)能否认为新教学法优于原教学法(α=0.05,t分布表附后)?(2)如果将配对样本数增加一倍,对I类错误和
最新回复
(
0
)