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
What Your iPad Knows About You A)You’ve finally finished the book your co-worker recommended, so what to read next? If it is 5 a
What Your iPad Knows About You A)You’ve finally finished the book your co-worker recommended, so what to read next? If it is 5 a
admin
2016-04-26
15
问题
What Your iPad Knows About You
A)You’ve finally finished the book your co-worker recommended, so what to read next? If it is 5 a.m., chances are that you’re reaching for a romance novel—especially if you’re in Texas or Georgia. By early morning, thrillers might start to look more appealing. And if Philip K. Dick is your favorite author, books about beer are probably more up your taste than anything about wine or liquor.
B)These are some of the insights from Scribd Inc. and Oyster, two startups that offer unlimited e-book rentals for a monthly subscription fee. Scribd, Oyster and Entitle Books—which just launched in December—are tracking reader behavior in hopes of figuring out recommendations of exactly what you’ll want to pick up next.
C)About 50% of the U.S. population owns a dedicated e-reader, according to a Pew Research study released last month. In addition, 28% read an e-book last year, up from 23% the previous year. The services are expanding. Scribd, a San Francisco-based site that started selling monthly e-book subscriptions last October, announced this month that its app is available on Amazon’s Kindle Fire and Kindle Paperwhite. After running exclusively on Apple’s operating system, New York-based Oyster plans to expand to Android later this year. And Entitle is considering adding an all-you-can-read feature to complement its current "book of the month"-style subscription service. Subscription services are popular because they "reduce the emotional burden" of purchasing, says Julie Haddon, Scribd vice president of marketing. Buying a book creates pressure to finish and get your money’s worth, she adds. In addition, people might try to save money by buying a cheaper book instead of the one they really want.
D)Brian Konash, 34, who works at Web startup Squarespace in Manhattan, joined Oyster two months ago because it didn’t cause the buyers’ sense of guilty he experienced when purchasing Kiridle e-books. "You’ve already paid for the service, so you can read as much as you want," he says. "With other models, there’s that little financial bite each time you want to buy a book and you worry that it’s going to be worthless." Mr. Konash, who has been picking books based on the site’s suggestions, predicts he’ll read up to 10 more books a year beyond his usual 25.
E)An all-access subscription "lowers the activation energy for reading," says Oyster CEO Eric Stromberg. Reading often has a high "activation energy" because there’s a time gap between wanting to read a book and then actually getting your hands on it, he says. "When you can order a book and instantly get it on your tablet, you can hear about the book and then read it right there," says Willem van Lancker, Oyster’s chief product officer.
F)"From the publishing perspective, the biggest problem is how to get people to care about a new book," says Otis Chandler, CEO of Goodreads, a site where people share what they’re reading and post recommendations. Goodreads, which was acquired by Amazon in March, uses an algorithm(运算法则)that recommends books that users with similar taste have enjoyed.
G)Oyster and Scribd ask readers to rate books, what they call an "active signal." They also track "passive signals," such as the percentage of a book that a reader finishes and the click rate, or how many people who are shown a book click through to learn more. The companies use that information among other factors to recommend books. Active signals represent what we wish we read, while passive signals are more honest, says Jared Friedman, Scribd chief technology officer. A lot of people give a 5-star rating to "The Great Gatsby," while they read greedily, but don’t necessarily rate, thrillers like "The Da Vinci Code," for example.
H)Other findings: Self-help might be a popular market, yet only about 20% of people who start such a book finish it. More than 80% of people who crack the pages of a mystery novel will find out who did it. People read through biographies at 20 pages per hour, while they read at three times that speed for erotica(色情作品). And higher "acceleration factor"—or how much readers speed up as they get closer to finishing—correlates with higher average rating for a book. One of the highest acceleration factors comes from Kurt Vonnegut’s "Cat’s Cradle," which readers start speeding through at the halfway mark, Mr. Friedman says. All three companies allow users to hide their reading behavior from other customers, but users can’t opt out of their behavior being collected by the company itself. Entitle, however, says it keeps track of browsing and download information only.
I)Personalized recommendations drive 10 times more browsing traffic than lists based on themes such as "globe-trotting memoirs" or "bad role models" that copy racks at the front of bookstores, Scribd’s Mr. Friedman says. The company is interested in combining algorithms with lists to create a list of best sellers that someone would, based on past reading behavior, find interesting. Another possible approach is to suggest different books or genres depending on time of day to take advantage of what the company knows about time-based preferences.
J)The algorithm doesn’t just analyze behavior signals, but "reads" through a book’s text to pull out different topics, genres and subjects, says Bryan Batten, chief executive of Entitle. There’s also a patent-pending(申请专利中的)service called "if these books had a baby," where users can input two books and find a third with similar themes. For example, the "baby" of Joseph Heller’s "Catch-22" and Leo Tolstoy’s "Anna Karenina" is Fyodor Dostoevsky’s "The Brothers Karamazov" but the product of "Catch-22" and Steve Jobs biography is a book called "Dealers of Lightning," about engineers at Xerox Corp.
K)Entitle operates on a tiered model: two books for $9.99 a month(the most popular plan), three for $14.99, and so on. For customers, the upside is being able to keep the e-books, even if they cancel the service. The services, of course, compete with the library. But libraries have had limited e-book offerings and there are often waits for the books. Robert Wolven, co-chair of the American Library Association’s Digital Content Working Group, says demand has increased significantly in the past 18 months. He says he doesn’t see the startups as a threat.
L)While libraries’ budget for e-books has been growing, licensing restrictions mean that popular titles often aren’t available, says Laura Girmscheid, research manager for the trade publication Library Journal, which recently released its fourth annual report on e-books in libraries. This, combined with holds on e-books, is the largest hurdle preventing people from using library e-books more. "It’s just not convenient for instant access," Ms. Girmscheid says.
The biggest problem for publication is how to raise reader’s interests in a new book.
选项
答案
F
解析
根据the biggest problem及publication可定位至F段首句。该句表示从出版的角度来看,最大的问题是如何让人们关注某本新书,其中的get people to care about意即引起读者兴趣,本题表述与之一致。故本题出处在F段。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/BtuFFFFM
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Itwasquitestableandcarefree.B、Itwasnoteasytosurvive.C、Peopleenjoyedalonghealthylife.D、Peopleneedn’tworkha
A、Topayfortransportation.B、Tomakeaphonecall.C、Todoshopping.D、Togivethemtothewoman.A女士问男士有没有零钱,她想打个电话。男士说“抱歉,我只
WhatIfYouCouldLearnEverything?A)Imagineeverystudenthasatirelesspersonaltutor,anartificiallyintelligentandinexh
A、Heisalwaysill.B、Heistooactive.C、Hespeakstoolittle.D、Hedoesabadthing.A男士说他的病人BenTinker先是感冒,后来是喉咙痛。但不是什么严重问题,但
Procrastinators(拖延症患者),takenote:Ifyou’vetriedbuildingself-disciplineandyou’restillputtingthingsoff,maybeyouneed
Procrastinators(拖延症患者),takenote:Ifyou’vetriedbuildingself-disciplineandyou’restillputtingthingsoff,maybeyouneed
Procrastinators(拖延症患者),takenote:Ifyou’vetriedbuildingself-disciplineandyou’restillputtingthingsoff,maybeyouneed
Accordingtosociologists,thereareseveraldifferentwaysinwhichapersonmaybecomerecognizedastheleaderofasocialgr
Don’tSayIt’sGlobalWarmingA)AsTexasendurestheslow,agonizingdeathofourentireagriculturalsectorbydrought,acheck
Kodak’sdecisiontofileforbankruptcyprotectionisasad,thoughnotunexpectedturningpointforaleadingAmericancorpora
随机试题
证明:当x>0时,x-(x2/2)<ln(1+x)<x.
甲、乙之间订有买卖合同,约定价款于2005年3月1日支付,丙为担保甲、乙之间的买卖合同的价款的支付与甲订立了保证合同,但并没有约定保证的方式,买卖合同到期后,乙无清偿能力,过了半个月,甲请求丙承担保证责任。下列观点正确的是()。A.丙得以先诉抗辩
不属于溢出性蛋白尿中的蛋白指
患者,男,工人。因在施工中头部被砸伤,出血不止,急诊来院。经检查,沿发际外侧有一纵行裂口,长约3.5cm,需清创缝合。下列除哪一项外,都是供应头皮的血管
(2008)防火间距应按相邻建筑物外墙的最近距离计算,下列表述何者正确?
下列对于基底检验说法错误的是()。
给操作员“牛会计”,增加“记账凭证审核”权限。
下列行政文化类型中,()氛围会使决策者的决策具有创造性、灵活性和综合性。
如果一个社会人人_______,事事弄虚作假,那么即使有真诚人想办实心事,也很难在社会上立足,从而发生“劣币驱逐良币”效应,导致虚伪_______,真诚消隐。填入画横线部分最恰当的一项是:
—Whatdoesyourbrotherlooklike?—______.
最新回复
(
0
)