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
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
admin
2018-09-15
3
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 Kindle 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.
When purchasing paper books, people might give up the one they want and choose a cheaper one in order to save money.
选项
答案
C
解析
根据purchasing,cheaper以及save money可定位到C段。该段后半部分分析了订阅服务盛行的原因,并在最后一句表示,人们可能会为了省钱而买一本比较便宜的书,而不是买他们真正想读的书。题目的purchasing对应原文的buying,而might give up…and choose则对应原文的instead of…,可确定本题出处在C段。
转载请注明原文地址:https://jikaoti.com/ti/RzRFFFFM
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
A、Hevisiteditinperson.B、Helearnedfromafriendaboutit.C、Hereadofitinamagazine.D、Heknewthesculptor.C对话中男士说:“
A、Watchingtraditionalplays.B、Visitingthemagnificentlibraries.C、Boatingontheriver.D、Cyclinginnarrowstreets.C短文说,“旅
A、Hewasdoingshopping.B、Hewaswatchingafilm.C、Hewasmakingaphonecall.D、Hewastalkingtoapoliceman.A短文开头就说约翰“那时正在
A、Itmustbesomethingunusual.B、It’sabusinessappointment.C、It’sahotdebateontheirlife.D、It’saprivatetalk.B本题考查对细
A、Theysettheirownexams.B、Theyselecttheirownstudents.C、Theyawardtheirowndegrees.D、Theyorganizetheirownlaborato
A、NationalSimilaritiesandGlobalDifferences.B、WorldCultureandtheFutureofSchooling.C、NationalDifferences,GlobalSimi
A、Friends.B、Coworkers.C、Interviewerandinterviewee.D、Doctorandpatient.C应聘面试对话的一个重要特征是:面试人主要提问,受试人主要回答问题,对话内容以学习背景、工作经历为主,
A、Aninformationcardofarestaurant.B、Hisownbusinesscard.C、Mr.Cooper’sbusinesscard.D、Anoteofwhattodo.A男士说,他还给了女
A、Nosmokingordrinkingguaranteeshappiness.B、Kidswithhappycharactersarelessinclinedtodrink.C、Unhappykidsaremore
A、DiamondHunting.B、Diamond—APreciousStone.C、Diamond—SymbolofFortune.D、HowIsDiamondFormedandFound?D判断推测题。文章主要讲钻石的形成
随机试题
英美法系承认仅依当事人的合意而有效的婚姻,这种婚姻是()
男性,50岁,血栓闭塞性脉管炎患者,患肢皮肤苍白,麻木,行走一段路后,感小腿疼痛,需止步休息,休息后疼痛缓解可再行走。患者Fontaine分期是【】
由一般原理推导出关于个别情况的结论,这种论证方法是()
中国某公司与甲国Rerp公司因一宗投资项目产生争议,Rerp公司向甲国法院起诉中国某公司并获得胜诉判决。中国某公司败诉后就同一案件向我国法院提起诉讼。Rerp公司以该案件已经甲国法院判决生效为由对中国法院提出管辖权异议。依据我国法律、司法解释以及我国缔结的
( )不按照委托监理合同的约定履行监理义务,对应当监理的项目不检查或不按规定检查,给建设单位造成损失的,应当承担相应的赔偿责任。
某人购买了一台电压表,刻度为0~10V,使用说明书中给出它的最大允许误差为±0.2%。在×10一档下使用,最大示值误差出现在80V处,其相对误差为-0.15%。为了保证其正确使用,对该电压表的计量特性分析如下:×10一档下的最大示值误差为()
234,118,58,30,14,()。
一项工程原计划由甲、乙两队合作30天完成。甲队提前完成了上一项工程,所以先独自开工。24天之后乙队加入,两队一起工作了12天。此时甲队退出该项工程,由乙队单独又干了15天才完工。问:若该项工程由乙队单独干,需要多少天完工?
Scientistsaresupposedtochangetheirminds.【F1】Havingadoptedtheirviewsonscientificquestionsbasedonanobjectiveeval
Notetakingisacomplexactivitythatrequiresahighlevelofabilityinmanyseparateskills.Firstly,thestudenthasto
最新回复
(
0
)