首页
登录
职称英语
The digital age may only just have dawned, but last night a group of eminent
The digital age may only just have dawned, but last night a group of eminent
游客
2023-12-17
29
管理
问题
The digital age may only just have dawned, but last night a group of eminent institutions issued a warning that large swaths of digital heritage risk being lost forever without urgent action to preserve them.
While the average website or e-mail would hardly qualify to be described as vital cultural artifacts, electronic information and communications are now so vital to every aspect of daily life that future generations could find an enormous "black hole in people’s collective memory" if important digital material is allowed to disappear, according to the Digital Preservation Coalition:
At risk. is everything from government records, which would previously have been published on paper but which now exist only in electronic form, to scientific data, computer games and personal websites, representatives of the coalition--made up of 17 British libraries, museums, archiving organisations and academic bodies--hold a meeting at the House of Commons.
Take computer games as examples, Britain is a world leader in developing computer games, with titles such as Tomb Raider and Grand Theft Auto bringing in bigger revenues than the domestic film and music industries combined. But some of the original 1980s games, often developed by teenagers using home computers, have all but disappeared.
The warning comes amid a growing realization internationally that society’s increasing reliance on information and communications technology raises serious problem with guaranteeing long term access to material which is available only in formats that are likely to become technologically obsolete.
The task of archiving even a small slice of important digital material is massive. While books hundreds of years old can still be read, electronic material from just a few years ago may already have been lost because it was only available briefly online or was preserved in an obsolete form.
The ephemeral, do-it-yourself nature of the Internet also poses a huge challenge. Internet users may feel deluged by the vast amounts of information available online, with thousands of new pages appearing every day, the vast majority of it of little general interest.
But with the average web page enjoying an online lifespan of barely four weeks, institutions like the British Library are now working on ways to select material worthy of preservation from the millions of web pages before it disappears, and store it in a way which allows access for future generations.
"A lot of people think the web is just porn and music downloads," Helen Shenton, head of collections care at the British Library told the Guardian.
"Much of it certainly is, but there is also a lot of important stuff, ephemeral publications, for example, which would have been published on paper before but now only exist as a web page."
As the legal repository for every book published by a UK imprint, the British Library receives about 150,000 paper publications a year to archive. But it believes that thousands of digital publications are being lost.
Since January 200i, when it launched a voluntary repository for electronic material, it has received only about 3,000 items, a fraction of the amount which should be preserved.
Lloyd Grossman, broadcaster and chairman of the Campaign for Museums, contrasted the experience of e-mail with that of the telegram. While the first telegram was preserved and has now been digitalized, the first e-mail, sent 31 years ago, has been lost. Grossman said: "E-mail took many years to become today’s pervasive form of communication and we are now beginning to realise how digital materials are more ephemeral than traditional materials.
"Sometimes the significance of key developments in new technologies may take several years to be recognized. The implications for our intellectual and cultural record and their preservation are profound." [br] Which of the following is NOT suggested in the last paragraph?
选项
A、People may not see the significance of certain new technologies immediately after they appear.
B、It may take several years for people to realise the impact of new technologies on our culture.
C、New technologies are likely to make it difficult to preserve valuable information.
D、New technologies will enable us to have access to more valuable information.
答案
C
解析
最后一段的意思是:有时新技术中突破性发展的重要性要经历许多年才能为人所知。但是这些突破性发展对我们的知识和文化及其保存的影响很大。这说明A和B属实,即人们在新技术刚刚出现时未必能看到它的重要性,人们也未必能意识到新技术对我们文化的影响。这也暗示了我们应该发展新技术,因为新技术更易于保存信息,让我们接触到更多的信息。所以只有C不属实,正确答案为C。
转载请注明原文地址:https://tihaiku.com/zcyy/3281557.html
相关试题推荐
Althoughthedistributionofrecordedmusicwentdigitalwiththeintroductio
Althoughthedistributionofrecordedmusicwentdigitalwiththeintroductio
TheVictorianAgewaslargelyanageof______,eminentlyrepresentedbyDickens
Althoughthedistributionofrecordedmusicwentdigitalwiththeintroductio
Althoughthedistributionofrecordedmusicwentdigitalwiththeintroductio
Althoughthedistributionofrecordedmusicwentdigitalwiththeintroductio
Althoughthedistributionofrecordedmusicwentdigitalwiththeintroductio
Althoughthedistributionofrecordedmusicwentdigitalwiththeintroductio
Thedigitalagemayonlyjusthavedawned,butlastnightagroupofeminent
MakeThataDoubleAfewyearsago,itdawnedonZachThomasthatcoffee
随机试题
WheredoesMr.CampbellarriveonTuesday?[br][originaltext]TheUnitedSt
[originaltext]M:InthisJulyissue,MoneyMagazinetakesalookatpeoplewho
【1】[br]Whatistotheleftofthelostpropertyoffice?[originaltext]Woman:G
Theyhardlybelievedthatthetroop______theriverthatnight,andsurrounded
[audioFiles]2014m2x/audio_ecsm_024_201312[/audioFiles]A、Diseasedlungs.B、Proce
适宜城市建设用地包括( )。A、地形坡度大的用地 B、不受洪水淹没的用地
D,1,2列里前一格的黑点相加等于3列里前一格的黑点,后一格中的黑点每一行均成等差数列
下列关于城市停车设施规划的表述,正确的是()。(2012年真题)A.城市出
下列属于党政机关和人民团体用地的是()。A:安全、保密、通讯等特殊专用设施用地
下列国家中,实行二元多头式金融监管体制的有()。A.美国 B.加拿大 C.日
最新回复
(
0
)