少妇AV一区二区三区无|久久AV电影一区三|日本一级片黄色毛片|亚洲久久成人av在线久操|黄色视频在线免费看呀一区二区|综合精品视频精品久久久浪朝|亚洲午夜成人资源|欧美黄色一级片黑寡妇|内射无毛少妇特写|无码农村夜晚偷拍啪啪

2017年5月商務英語初級閱讀模擬試題及答案(6)

時間:2017-04-05 13:40:00   來源:無憂考網(wǎng)     [字體: ]
COMPUTER companies keep competing to build smaller devices (裝置). They are finding new ways to put data (數(shù)據(jù)) into less space on a memory chip (內(nèi)存芯片).
  Computers have been made smaller to fit on to the desktop, smaller again to fit on our laps and again to fit into our shirt pockets (口袋).
  Now, Stuart S. P. Parkin, an IBM researcher, is looking into a new idea in an IBM lab. If it proves successful, electronic devices could hold 10 to 100 times the data in the same amount of space.
  That means the iPod that today can hold up to 200 hours of video could store every single TV program broadcast (播放) during a week on 120 channels.
  Parkin thinks he is close to a breakthrough. This could increase the amount of data stored on a chip.
  At present the flash drives (閃存卡) business is growing quickly. They are used in digital cameras, cellphones and PCs. Flash drives with multiple (多個) memory chips store up to 64gigabytes (十億字節(jié)) of data. A single chip is expected to reach about 50 gigabytes in the next five years.
  However, flash memory has a problem. Although it can read data quickly, it is very slow at storing it. That has led the industry on a hunt for new storage technologies.
  Scientists say Parkin’s new computer memory, called "racetrack memory (賽道內(nèi)存)", could begin to replace flash memory in three to five years.