题目内容

Google was vastly better than anything that had come before: so much better, in fact, that it changed the way many people use the web. Almost overnight, it made the web far more useful, particularly for non- specialist users, many of whom now regard Google as the internet' s front door. The recent fuss over Google's stock market flotation obscures its far wider social significance: few technologies, after all, are so influential that their names become used as verbs.
Google began in 1998 as an academic research project by Sergey Brin and Lawrence Page, who were then graduate students at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California. It was not the first search engine, of course. Existing search engines were able to scan or "crawl" a large portion of the web, build an index, and then find pages that matched particular words. But they were less good at presenting those pages, which might number in the hundreds of thousands, in a useful way.
Mr Brin's and Mr Page's accomplishment was to devise a way to sort the results by determining which pages were likely to be most relevant. They did so using a mathematical recipe, or algorithm, called PageRank. This algorithm is at the heart of Google's success, distinguishing it from all previous search engines and accounting for its apparently magical ability to find the most useful web pages.
Untangllng the web
PageRank works by analysing the structure of the web itself. Each of its billions of pages can link to other pages, and can also, in turn, be linked to. Mr Brin and Mr Page reasoned that if a page was linked to many other pages, it was likely to be important. Furthermore, if the pages that linked to a page were important, then that page was even more likely to be important. There is, of course, an inherent circularity to this formula--the importance of one page depends on the importance of pages that link to it, the importance of wb4ch depends in turn on the importance of pages that link to them. But using some mathematical tricks, this circularity can be resolved, and each page can be given a score that reflects its importance.
The simplest way to calculate the score for each page is to perform. a repeating or "iterative" calculation (see article). To start with, all pages are given the same score. Then each link from one page to another is counted as a "vote" for the destination page. Each page's score is recalculated by adding up the contribution from each incoming link, which is simply the score of the linking page divided by the number of outgoing links on that page. (Each page's score is thus shared out among the pages it links to.)
Once all the scores have been recalculated, the process is repeated using the new scores, until the scores settle down and stop changing (in mathematical jargon, the calculation "converges"). The final scores can then be used to rank search results: pages that match a particular set of search terms are displayed in order of descending score, so that the page deemed most important appears at the top of the list.
We can infer from the lst paragragh that by "hit-or-miss" it is meant______.

A. before Google, searching online was impossible
B. before Google, searching online lacked accuracy
C. before Google, searching online was difficult
D. Google is easy to use

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Who is Johnny Depp?

A. Moss's fiance.
B. French actress-singer Vanessa Paradis' lover.
C. Brit artist Jake Chapman's sweetheart.
D. Paradis' wife.

SECTION B INTERVIEW
Directions: In this section you will hear everything ONCE ONLY. Listen carefully and then answer the questions that follow. Questions 1 to 5 are based on an interview. At the end of the interview you will be given 10 seconds to answer each of the following five questions.
Now listen to the interview.
听力原文:Officer: Mrs. Harrison (I-I), thanks very much for coming down here to the station. I --I know you've been through a terrible situation here today. Urn...I'd just like to go over some of the things that you told Sergeant Clark at the bank.
H: All right.
O: Uh, would you like a cup of tea?
H: No. No, I' m fine.
O: All right.
H: Thanks.
O: Well, urn ...could you describe the two people who robbed the bank for this report we're filling out here? Now, anything at all that you can remember would be extremely helpful to us.
H: Well, uh ... just... I can only remember basically what I said before.
O: That's all right.
H: The man was tall.., uh... about six feet, and he had dark hair
O: Dark hair.
H: And he had a moustache.
O: Very good. All right, did he have any other distinguishing marks, I mean scars, for example, anything like that?
H: Scars ... urn.., no. No, none that I can remember.
O: Do you remember how old he was, by any chance?
H: Uh ... well, I --I guess around thirty ....
O: Around thirty.
H: ... may be younger, plus or minus a few years.
O: Mm-hmm. All right, do you, uh, remember anything about what he might have been wearing?
H: Yes. Yes, he---he had on a dark sweater, a----a solid colour. You know, the kind of colour young people fancy nowadays.
O: Or. Urn ... anything else that strikes you at the moment?
H: I --I remember he was wearing a light shirt under the sweater. A cotton one with dark, I think, dark stripes. It looked like a good brand.
O: Ah, very good.
H: Yes, yes.
O: Mm --hmm. All right, now, can you tell us anything about the female robber, Mrs. Harrison?
H: Well, I remember that she did most of the talking. She had the gun pointed at us and she told us to lie down, and not to move if we knew what was good for us. I remember it just felt like she was pointing the gun fight at me, and my little daughter was fight next to me and she--she was just so frightened...
O: Uh, Mrs. Harrison, could you describe her for us?
H: Ugh. She was wearing a wool sweater...
O: Ah, very good.
H: I remember it was a dark color, navy blue or...or dark grey.
O: dark grey, mm--hmm.
H: ... and I guess she was in her late twenties. Uh, her hair was short, very short and a bit curly.
O: Do you remember how tall she was?
H: Uh ...about the same as myself, around five four.
O: Five four, mm --hmm. All fight, do you, uh .... remember anything else about this woman?
H: Yes. I remember that the woman was wearing a pendant around her neck.
O: Uh--hmm.
H: I remember specifically because I was then near the counter, next to the bank manager, and my little daughter started to cry...
O: Oh.
H: ...and this woman came up to me and was very rude to my daughter. So I had a good look at her and ...and she was sort of, uh, pulling on the chain, uh, playing with the pendant.
O: Oh?
H: It was gold, uh, well, anyway, it looked like gold, and it got a strange shape.
O: Mm—hmm. Did either of them have any other, uh, noticeable characteristics, Mrs. Harrison? Now, just take a moment
H: No, I don't...
O: ...to think about this.
H: No. No, and this is really all I can remember.
O: Well, did either of them wear glasses?
H: No, no, I' m sure of that.
O: Mm --hmm. All fight, Mrs. Harrison, I really appreciate what you've been through today. I' m just going to ask you to look at some pohtographs before you leave, if you don't mind. It won't take very long. Can you do that for me?
H: Oh, all fight.
O: Would you like to step this way with me, please?
H: Ok. Sure.

A. clothes
B. age
C. physique
D. appearance

听力原文: Just a word of advice: If you' re a famous person living in London, go out and get the best security system money can buy.
Skeletal Brit supermodel Kate Moss became the third star to fall victim to' burglars in London this year, The Sun tabloid reported today. Madonna and Jerry Hall both had their English mansions ransacked earlier in the year.
Irreplaceable Items thieves reportedly broke into Moss' home and made $350,000 worth of the wife' s jewelry disappear, including two irreplaceable items: a $28,000 diamond necklace given to her by former fiance Johnny Depp, and a diamond ring that was a family heirloom.
The burglars also took other jewels and $70,000 in traveler's checks, The Sun said.
Moss, 26, was apparently on a two-week vacation in the United States when her $1.4 million home in northwest London was hit. A supposed friend of the model's told The Sun, "Kate has been knocked sideways by this. She's still in shock. Johnny was the first love of her life. She's particularly upset at losing the necklace because of what it means to her. It's like losing a piece of herself."
Depp and Moss had a fiery four-year relationship --at a time when both stars were on the fast track in the young celeb party circuit --that ended in 1997, when Depp left Moss for French actress-singer Vanessa Paradis.
Depp and Paradis now have a child together and are expecting another. Moss has been romantically linked to controversial Brit artist Jake Chapman.
The Sun claimed that Moss, who lives alone at the house, has decided to stay in the States until a new security system has been installed in her home.
How much did Moss lose?

A. $350,000.
B. $70,000.
C. $420,000.
D. $1.4 million.

Where will Moss intend to stay?

A. London.
B. Paris.
C. The United States.
D. Japan.

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