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Fred英语笔记

作者: Fred英语笔记
最近更新: 2021/9/9
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vol.26|郎平宣布离任女排主教练

vol.26|郎平宣布离任女排主教练

> Lang resigns as volleyball head coach郎平宣布离任女排主教练Lang Ping announced on Wednesday that she has stepped down as head coach of China's national women's volleyball team. The China Volleyball Association also confirmed that Lang's contract expired on Aug 31. "Today is my first day after leaving the post of head coach of China women's volleyball team. I feel fulfilled and happy when I look back on my volleyball career. I am grateful for all the support I have received from people who love volleyball," Lang wrote on social media. Known as the "Iron Hammer" during her playing career, Lang took over the Chinese women's team for the second time in 2013. Under Lang's guidance, China won Olympic gold in Rio 2016, as well as 2015 and 2019 World Cup titles. But China failed to progress through the group stage at last month's 2020 Olympic Games after losing against Turkey, the United States and Russia.9月1日,郎平在个人社交媒体上发文宣布自己已离任中国女排主教练一职。中国排协亦证实,郎平的合同已于8月31日到期。郎平写道:"今天,是我离任中国女排主教练的第一天。回首这么多年的排球生涯,我感觉很满足,很幸福。我要再次感谢全国球迷的厚爱。"郎平在运动员时期被称作"铁榔头",2013年第二次担任中国女排主教练。在郎平的指导下,中国女排赢得了2016年里约奥运会金牌,以及2015年和2019年女排世界杯冠军。但在上月举行的东京奥运会上,中国女排先后负于土耳其队、美国队和俄罗斯队,无缘小组出线。

2021/9/5
453
vol.24 | 罗马推出披萨自动售货机

vol.24 | 罗马推出披萨自动售货机

Fresh pizza vending machine罗马推披萨自动贩卖机Rome has a new vending machine which slides out freshly cooked pizzas in just three minutes. Buyers using the flaming red "Mr. Go Pizza" machine can choose from four different kinds of pizzas costing from 4.50 to 6 euros. The machine kneads and tops the dough and customers can watch the pizza cook behind a small glass window. Reviews by customers of the machine, one of the first in Rome, ranged from "acceptable if you're in a hurry" to outright horror. People have been eating forms of flat bread with toppings for millennia, but it is generally accepted that pizza was perfected in Naples. In fact, for many Italians, the classic pizza experience includes watching a "pizzaiolo," (pizzamaker) knead the dough and cooking it in a wood-burning brick oven within sight of your table.罗马出现了一台全新的自动售货机,它能在三分钟内吐出一张现烤披萨。这台名为"Mr. Go Pizza"的红色自动贩卖机上有四种不同的披萨饼可供食客选择,售价从约35元到46元不等。机器会揉面,并在面饼上加配料,顾客可以在一个小玻璃窗后观看披萨饼的烹饪过程。顾客们对这台机器的评价不一,有人表示"赶时间的话可以接受",还有人觉得简直糟糕极了。披萨作为一种带馅料的面饼食物已经存在上千年,但那不勒斯的披萨是公认最佳的。事实上,对于许多意大利人来说,享用披萨的经典体验包括坐在餐桌前观看"披萨师"揉面团并在烧柴的砖制窑炉上烤披萨。

2021/7/6
605
vol.23 | 日本推广4天工作制

vol.23 | 日本推广4天工作制

【Japanese government backs 4-day workweek】日本计划推广4天工作制Japan&`&s government plans to encourage firms to let their employees choose to work four days a week instead of five, aiming to improve the balance between work and life for people who have family care responsibilities or need more time off to acquire new skills. The government included the promotion of an optional four-day workweek in its annual economic policy guideline finalized Friday by Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga&`&s cabinet. Experts are divided, however, on whether the new initiative, intended to address challenges posed by the country&`&s labor shortage, will be widely accepted, with labor and management both voicing concerns about possible unwanted outcomes. For employers, while people working four days a week may become more motivated, this may not improve their productivity enough to compensate for the lost workday. Employees, meanwhile, fear pay cuts.日本政府计划鼓励企业让员工选择每周工作四天,目的是为那些有家庭护理责任或需要更多业余时间来学习新技能的人改善工作和生活之间的平衡。日本政府在6月18日由首相菅义伟的内阁敲定的年度经济政策指导方针中将推广选择性的每周四天工作制包括在内。虽然这项新举措意在解决日本面临的劳动力短缺挑战,但是劳资双方均对该举措可能导致的后果表示担忧,因此,专家对该举措能否被广泛接受也存在分歧。对于雇主来说,虽然每周工作四天会让员工更有动力,但由此提高的生产力可能不足以弥补失去的工作日。与此同时,员工也担心降薪。

2021/6/30
737
vol.22 | 被剥夺的“触觉”

vol.22 | 被剥夺的“触觉”

The pandemic has been an exercise in subtraction. There are the voids left by loved ones who have succumbed to covid-19, the gaps where jobs and school used to be, and the absence of friends and family. And then there are the smaller things that are missing. To stop the spread of covid-19 people have forsaken the handshakes, pats, squeezes and strokes that warm daily interactions. The loss of any one hardly seems worthy of note.And yet touch is as necessary to human survival as food and water, says Tiffany Field, director of the Touch Research Institute at the Miller School of Medicine, part of the University of Miami. It is the first sense to develop and the only one necessary for survival. We can live with the loss of sight or hearing. But without touch, which enables us to detect such stimuli as pressure, temperature and texture, we would be unable to walk or feel pain. Our skin is the vehicle through which we navigate the world.

2021/2/25
1094
vol.21 | 为什么世界的电商都应该看向中国?

vol.21 | 为什么世界的电商都应该看向中国?

The great mall of ChinaWhy retailers everywhere should look to ChinaThat is where they will see the future of e-commerceOver the past ten months most people in the rich world have participated in the biggest shopping revolution in the West since malls and supermarkets conquered suburbia 50 years ago. The pandemic has led to a surge in online spending, speeding up the shift from physical stores by half a decade or so. Forget the chimney; Christmas gifts in 2020 came flying through the letterbox or were dumped on the doorstep. Workers at a handful of firms, including Amazon and Walmart, have made superhuman efforts to fulfil online orders, and their investors have made supernormal profits as Wall Street has bid up their shares on euphoria that Western retailing is at the cutting edge.Yet as we explain this week (see Business section) it is in China, not the West, where the future of e-commerce is being staked out. Its market is far bigger and more creative, with tech firms blending e-commerce, social media and razzmatazz to become online-shopping emporia for 850m digital consumers. And China is also at the frontier of regulation, with the news on December 24th that trustbusters were investigating Alibaba, co-founded by Jack Ma, China’s most celebrated tycoon, and until a few weeks ago its most valuable listed firm. For a century the world’s consumer businesses have looked to America to spot new trends, from scannable barcodes on Wrigley’s gum in the 1970s to keeping up with the Kardashians’ consumption habits in the 2010s. Now they should be looking to the East.China’s lead in e-commerce is not entirely new. By size, its market overtook America’s in 2013—with little physical store space, its consumers and retailers leapfrogged ahead to the digital world. When Alibaba listed in 2014 it was the world’s largest-ever initial public offering. Today the country’s e-retailing market is worth $2trn, more than America’s and Europe’s combined. But beyond its sheer size it now stands out from the past, and from the industry in the West, in several crucial ways.For a start it is more dynamic. In the past few years new competitors, including Meituan and Pinduoduo, have come of age with effervescent business models. One sign of fierce competition is that Alibaba’s share of the market capitalisation of the Chinese e-commerce industry has dropped from 81% when it listed to 55% today. Competition has also led e-commerce and other tech firms to demolish the boundaries between different types of services that are still common in the West. Point and click are passé: online-shopping platforms in China now blend digital payments, group deals, social media, gaming, instant messaging, short-form videos and live-streaming celebrities.The obvious, multi-trillion-dollar question is whether the Chinese model of ecommerce will go global. As has been the case for decades, Silicon Valley’s giants still tend to underestimate China. There are few direct links between the American and Chinese e-commerce industries, partly owing to protectionism on both sides (Yahoo sold much of its stake in Alibaba, far too early, in 2012). And Western firms have long been organised in cosy, predictable silos. So Visa specialises in payments, Amazon in e-commerce, Facebook in social media, Google in search, and so on. The main source of uncertainty in e-commerce has been just how many big traditional retailers will go bust—over 30 folded in America in 2020—and whether a few might manage the shift online, as Walmart and Target have.Yet however safe and siloed Western e-retailing may appear to be, it is now unlikely that it will become the world’s dominant mode of shopping. Already, outside rich countries, the Chinese approach is gaining steam. Many leading e-commerce firms in South-East Asia (Grab and Sea), India (Jio), and Latin America (Mercado Libre) are influenced by the Chinese strategy of offering a “super-app” with a cornucopia of services from noodle delivery to financial services. The giant consumer-goods firms that straddle the Western and Chinese markets may transmit Chinese ideas and business tactics, too. Multinationals such as Unilever, L’Oréal and Adidas make more revenue in Asia than in America and their bosses turn to there, not to California or Paris, to see the latest in digital marketing, branding and logistics.Already, Chinese characteristics are emerging in the retail heartlands of the West, partly as a result of the pandemic. The silos are breaking down as firms diversify. Facebook is now promoting shopping services on its social networks, and engaging in “social commerce”, including in live-streaming and the use of WhatsApp, for messaging between merchants and shoppers. In December Walmart hosted its first live shopping event within TikTok, a Chinese-owned video app in which it hopes to buy a stake. In France in the past quarter the sixth-most-downloaded e-commerce app was Vova, linked to Pinduoduo’s founder. And new entrants may finally make progress in America—the share price of Shopify, a platform for Amazon exiles and small firms, has soared so that it is now valued at more than $140bn.This shift to a more Chinese-style global industry promises to be excellent news for consumers. Prices would be lower, as China has seen fierce discounting by competing firms. Choice and innovation would probably grow. Even so, Chinese ecommerce has flaws. In a Wild West climate, fraud is more common. And there are those antitrust concerns. It is tempting to see the crackdown on Mr Ma as just another display of brutal Communist Party power (see Free exchange). It may partly be that, but China’s antitrust regulators are also keen to boost competition. That means enforcing interoperability, so that, for example, payments services on one ecommerce platform can be used seamlessly on a rival one. And it means preventing e-commerce firms from penalising merchants who sell goods in more than one place online. So far American and European trustbusters have been ineffectual at controlling big tech, despite a flurry of lawsuits and draft laws at the end of 2020. They, too, should study China, for a sense of where the industry is heading and how to respond.There is a pattern to how the West thinks about Chinese innovation. From electronics to solar panels, Chinese manufacturing advances were either ignored or dismissed as copying, then downplayed and then grudgingly acknowledged around the world. Now it is the Chinese consumer’s tastes and habits that are going global. Watch and learn.

2021/1/7
1035
vol.20 | Japan invests in AI matchmaking to boost birth rate

vol.20 | Japan invests in AI matchmaking to boost birth rate

原文:Last year the number of babies born in Japan fell below 865,000 - a record low. The fast-greying nation has long been searching for ways to reverse one of the world's lowest fertility rates. Boosting the use of AI tech is one of its latest efforts. Japan plans to boost its tumbling birth rate by funding artificial intelligence matchmaking schemes to help residents find love. From next year it will subsidise local governments already running or starting projects that use AI to pair people up. A few of the existing systems are limited to considering criteria such as income and age, only producing a result if there is an exact match. Local media say that the funding aims to allow authorities to harness more costly advanced systems that take into account factors like hobbies and values. Sachiko Horiguchi, a socio-cultural and medical anthropologist at Japan's Temple University, thinks there are better ways for the government to bump up the birth rate than subsidising AI matchmaking - such as helping young people earning low wages. She pointed to a recent report which suggests a link between lower income levels and the loss of interest in romantic relationships among young Japanese adults. Analysts have long pointed towards the lack of support for working mothers in Japan, where there are strong expectations that women will do all the housework and raise children alongside doing their jobs.

2020/12/23
1144
vol.19 | Don't blow it: a travel-bubble experiment

vol.19 | Don't blow it: a travel-bubble experiment

原文:Of all the industries mauled by covid-19, travel may be the most maimed. Tourism’s collapse could deprive the global economy of $4.7trn this year and cost 174m jobs. So governments are desperate to restart international travel. This weekend Hong Kong and Singapore launch the world’s most comprehensive air-travel bubble, with travellers able to fly between the two cities without having to quarantine and without restrictions on what they may do upon arrival. Both destinations have the virus under control and trust one another’s testing regimes. Nonetheless, visitors must take two covid-19 tests, one before they fly and another on touchdown. Numbers will initially be restricted and the scheme will be suspended should either city average more than five untraceable infections a day. Loosening border restrictions in Europe failed because the virus’s prevalence was too high and test-and-trace systems too lax—probably supercharging the continent’s second wave. The world will watch this latest attempt with hope.

2020/12/15
744
vol.18 | US Leaving Paris Climate Agreement

vol.18 | US Leaving Paris Climate Agreement

America formally left the Paris climate agreement, (which is) something that Mr Trump first promised to do in 2017. Of the nearly 200 nations that signed the agreement = signatory = participating countries, the U.S. is the only one to walk away from its promises to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The president claims that the pact, under which America promised to cut emissions by at least 26% from their 2005 levels by 2025, will hurt the economy. When the Paris Agreement was concluded in 2015, it was hailed as a historic commitment, among nearly 200 nations, to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to stave off the worst effects of climate change. The pact’s stated aim was to keep global average temperatures from increasing by more than two degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels by the end of this century and to pursue efforts to keep that temperature rise below 1.5 degrees C.

2020/11/9
584
vol.15 | TV Education

vol.15 | TV Education

TV EducationReal-life stories turned into television (TV) stories are captivating TV audiences. New mainstream shows are about educating people about difficult subjects.This is instead of entertaining them. Education TV shows usually makes you think of documentaries, cooking shows, children’s shows, or the shows on the Discovery Channel.However, the idea of turning true difficult stories into TV shows goes back to the 1970s when the show “Roots” was on TV. It was about American slavery.A TV director said that “Roots” showed people the awful truth about slavery. It made them rethink their preconceived stereotypes.This is happening now. In 2019, people are using the show “Unbelievable” to find out more about unsolved rapes.These shows from real life are winning awards, and more TV companies are continuing to make them.

2019/11/4
400
vol.14 | Young People Are Not Watching TV News

vol.14 | Young People Are Not Watching TV News

Young people in Great Britain are watching less and less news on television. This is according to Ofcom, a regulatory body that oversees broadcasting practices in the UK. This comes as no surprise as young people become increasingly addicted to their smartphones. Youth are opting for online distractions like YouTube videos, social media and games rather than switch on a TV and watch a news programme. Britain's Guardian newspaper reported that: "The youth of the nation are more likely to get their day's news about the world from social media or by reading graffiti in bus stations than seeing it on the telly, with the average 16-24-year-old watching just two minutes' worth of live TV news per day."Ofcom commissioned research into the news-viewing habits of people around the country. The report is called "News Consumption in the UK: 2019". The research suggests that young people are increasingly using social media as their primary news source. Researchers wrote: "There is evidence that UK adults are consuming news more actively via social media." They reported an increase in posts and comments on Facebook and Twitter about the news compared to last year. Ofcom suggested presenting news stories in a less complicated, more accessible way to attract young people's attention. Some people suggested this would be "dumbing down content for young audiences".

2019/11/1
868
vol.13 | UK might Ban Food on Public Transport

vol.13 | UK might Ban Food on Public Transport

UK might Ban Food on Public TransportThe United Kingdom's government is thinking about banning all food and drink on public transport. The UK's plan to ban people eating and drinking on trains and buses is not popular with people. They say the government should not control whether or not people can eat and drink on public transport. Many people said the plan was another example of the UK becoming a "nanny state". This is a country that wants to control everything people can and cannot do. The UK's Chief Medical Officer, professor Sally Davies, said the plan was necessary to help reduce obesity. She said it was part of a plan to halve obesity in children by 2030 and to help people make healthier lifestyle choices.Professor Davies reported that there are twice as many overweight schoolchildren today as there were 30 years ago. She said: "Today's children are drowning in a flood of unhealthy food and drink options." She said this is made worse because of "insufficient opportunities for being active". She said children do not get enough exercise. She added: "We must go further and faster."

2019/10/30
604
vol.12 | Uber Cuts Jobs

vol.12 | Uber Cuts Jobs

Uber Cuts JobsThe company Uber has cut 350 jobs. Uber´s CEO announced the layoffs in an email which he sent to the employees on Monday.A spokesperson confirmed the news to CNN. The announcement affected many teams across the company, including marketing, technologies or recruiting. The number of layoffs is about a percentage of the total number of employees at Uber.This is the third round of layoffs in the company in recent months. In September, 435 jobs were cut in engineering and product teams. In August, there were 400 layoffs in the marketing team.Difficult words: 1. CEO (a chief executive officer, the highest-ranking person in the company)2. layoff (a job that a company ends)3. recruiting (a department in a company which selects new candidates for a job).

2019/10/28
442