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Starting from B14 version of ZXCTN 9000 product, we can use command()in hidden mode t

Starting from B14 version of ZXCTN 9000 product, we can use command()in hidden mode t

o synchronize MAC addresses of master/slave main boards to avoid serious results from inconsistent master/slave MAC addresses.

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更多“Starting from B14 version of Z…”相关的问题
第1题
听力原文:M: Hello.W: Hi, George, it's Angel from creator writing class.M: Oh, hi, Angel, W

听力原文:M: Hello.

W: Hi, George, it's Angel from creator writing class.

M: Oh, hi, Angel, What's up?

W: Well, I have a new project I thought you might be interested in. I'm setting up a writers group. You know a support group for people who trying to get published.

M: (23) How would it work?

W: We get together once a week. I've already applied for a meeting room in the library, and then (23) we share what we were working on and offer each other the advice.

M: I could take some advice. I'm working on a short story that would like to get published in the campus literary review. You've done that, haven't you? (24) Didn't I see a poem of yours in the last issue?

W: Yes, I was so excited to see finally my work in print. It was my third submission. You just have to keep trying if they turn you down.

M: Well I'm sure the group could help me, but I don't know how much I can contribute. I'm really just starting out, doing a lot of work, but I'm definitely still in novels.

W: That's OK, I know about you though the comments of your class, and you will be an asset. We are going to arrange more activities to help too. (25) Professor Granger has agreed to sit in on a few sessions and she's also going to make up a list of local professionals who might be willing to spend some time with us.

M: Sounds great! You can definitely count me in.

(20)

A.Write comments on the others' works.

B.Give advice to each other.

C.Write poems.

D.Publish new works.

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第2题
听力原文:W: Excuse me, I noticed you're reading an electronics magazine. Did you know ther
e's a big electronics exhibition in Chicago starting tomorrow?

M: Of course! That's the reason I'm going to Chicago. Hi! My name's Barney Miller. What's your name?

W: Jenny Lin. I'm a sales representative for Woofers, based in Taiwan. Are you looking forward to the exhibition?

M: Huh, I've been waiting to go to the show for more than three months. There are going to be companies from over forty different countries there.

W: I know. I'm really looking forward to seeing what new products will be on the market next year.

M: I'm more interested in the new discoveries, which are being made in the electronics industry.

W: Really? Do you mind if I ask what part of the electronics industry you're in?

M: Not at all. I work in the Research and Development Department of a company based in Los-Angeles. We specialize in designing printers.

W: What's the name of your company? Maybe I've heard of it.

M: I don't think so. We're just a little company called "Sunrise".

W: Hmm. Oh, didn't you come out with an amazingly small but strong high tech printer at the exhibition last year in New York?

M: Yeah, that turned out to be our best seller of the year, but everyone forgets our name.

W: One of my jobs is to look for the products that will be the most successful, and then find out why. So I don't just remember the big companies.

M: I like the way you think, Jenny. Would you like to get together for dinner when we arrive in Chicago, so we can talk more about this?

(20)

A.A magazine.

B.The city of Chicago.

C.The electronics industry.

D.Their travel.

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第3题
听力原文:W: Please sit down. Let's see, you're Mr. Walsh, is that right?M: Right.W: And yo

听力原文:W: Please sit down. Let's see, you're Mr. Walsh, is that right?

M: Right.

W: And you are looking for a job?

M: Yes, I am. I'll graduate from college next June. I'm majoring in architecture.

W: I see. Have you ever done any work in this field?

M: No, nothing. We did some practice work in class though.

W: Do you have copies of your letters of recommendation with you?

M: Yes. One's from Dr. Hilton and one's from Mr. Phelps.

W: Good. Now what kind of salary are you hoping to get?

M: From what I've read it seems that a starting salary would be around $12,000 a year.

W: Here you would start at $10,500 for the first year--a kind of training period. Then you would go to$15,000. After that your raises would depend on how well you work.

M: That sounds fair enough. What about other benefits, things like vacation?

W: Those are all explained in this pamphlet. You can take it along and look at it.

M: Is it all right if I send in the rest of the things for my application?

W: That would be fine. After Mr. Sheehan looks all the applications over he'll make the final decision.

M: What do you think are the chances of my getting the job?

W: Well, I'm talking to three people today and four tomorrow. We'll be hiring two people.

M: I surely hope that I can work here. But I guess I'll just have to go home and wait.

W: You'll hear sometime next month. Good luck and thanks for coming today.

(20)

A.$15,000.

B.$10,500.

C.$14,000.

D.$16,000.

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第4题
听力原文:M: How is school going, Barbara? Are you taking any new classes?W: I'm taking ano

听力原文:M: How is school going, Barbara? Are you taking any new classes?

W: I'm taking another really interesting course called Business and the Web. We are learning about e-commerce and how new technological developments will affect the way we buy, sell and market things in the future.

M: Wow, that sounds like something I should take.

W: I think it's one of the most useful courses I've had so far. Right now, we are studying wireless communications and how that's going to affect the development of the internet and eventually online business. We have had several lectures on the importance of cell phones and several new kinds of portable computers and other electronic devices which are based on related technologies.

M: What other kinds of topics will you be covering?

W: We are going to discuss high bandwidth Internet connections, like cable modems, which will allow us to exchange information more quickly. And from there, we will focus on how Internet, TV, radio and telephone technologies are all starting to come together.

M: I was just reading about that in the newspaper. But how does that relate to online business?

W: As these technologies converge in the near future, a new high-speed network will develop which will be perfect for the distribution of products and services online.

(20)

A.E-commerce.

B.Wireless communications.

C.Business and the web.

D.New technology.

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第5题
A.He suggests working with the school board.B.He suggests starting the project from hi

A.He suggests working with the school board.

B.He suggests starting the project from his hospital.

C.He suggests making the project more popular.

D.He suggests going to the school to spread the project.

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第6题
听力原文:M: I've been running a mile every afternoon for the past month. But I still haven
't been able to lose more than a pound or two. I wonder if it is worth it.

W: It always seems hard when you are just starting out.

Q: What does the woman mean?

(16)

A.The man should start running daily.

B.She also prefers to exercise in the afternoon.

C.It's important to warm up before exercising.

D.The man should continue his exercise program.

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第7题
听力原文:M: We've been working on this proposal for so long that my eyes are starting to b
lur.

W: Why don't we get out of here? The green meadow around the library is good for your eyes. We can wrap it up later.

Q: What does the woman mean?

(14)

A.The man should relax for a while.

B.The man should see a doctor in the library.

C.It shouldn't take long to write the proposal.

D.The man should wrap up his books as quickly as possible.

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第8题
听力原文:M: Good morning.W: Good morning. Please come in and have a seat.M: Thank you.W: I

听力原文:M: Good morning.

W: Good morning. Please come in and have a seat.

M: Thank you.

W: I have been looking through your application. You seem to have many of the. qualifications needed for this position. That's one of the reasons why you've been short-listed.

M: Thank you. As a matter of fact, I have been in computer programming for three years.

W: Yes, I see. Were you satisfied with your last position?

M: Generally, yes. But to be honest, not entirely. I was with a small, family-owned company, and chances for advancement were very limited.

W: The letter of reference from the president praises your work highly.

M: Mr. Brown gave me a lot of responsibility and I learned a great deal about company operations.

W: Well, we ask for loyalty and hard work from our employees. But we pay well, and opportunities for promotion depend on merit, not just age or seniority.

M: I am very interested in working for your firm.

W: I see. Well, have you got any questions?

M: Yes, well, I wonder if you could tell me what the salary would be.

W: Of course. We'd be offering a starting salary of $ 600 a week, that's for 40 hours.

M: Do you mean that it might be increased at a later time?

W: Yes, we usually give our staff a month's trial and then, if everything is satisfactory, we raise the salary by 20 percent. Any more questions?

M: No. I think that's all.

W: Well, thank you very much for coming in. I have a few more short-listed candidates to interview today for this position. But at the moment, your chances look very good. We will be in touch with you soon.

M: Thank you very much for your time.

(20)

A.He was looking for a job.

B.He seemed to have many needed qualifications.

C.He handed in his application earlier than others.

D.He needed a position in the company.

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第9题
passage 5The city finally won approval for a limited speed camera program in June after a

passage 5

The city finally won approval for a limited speed camera program in June after a long battle in Albany,and City Mayor Bloomberg announced on Monday that starting Sept.9,the city will _1_ 20 cameras in school zones around the city, despite _2_ from police unions to the pilot program. Officials won’t _3_ where exactly the cameras will go—hoping to maximize the warning effect on speeding from the cameras—and plan to move them around _4_ between different schools. But they’ve _5_ 100 schools in all five boroughs where at least 75% of cars speed and plan to target the schools with the worst speeding problems. The cameras, which will be _6_ to drivers, will catch motorists going at least 10 miles an hour over the speed limit. Drivers will be hit with $50 fines, though officials will give out warnings for the first few weeks of the program. Statistics show a child hit by a car going 40 miles per hour faces a 70% chance of being killed, while a kid hit at 30 miles per hour has an 80% chance of _7_. “Speeding continues to be the _8_ killer on the streets of New York,” said Transportation Commissioner Janette Sadik-Khan. “It is _9_ that New York City’s speed limit is 30 miles an hour. Going even ten miles over the speed limit is the difference between life and death.” Bloomberg said he’d prefer a less _10_ speed camera program and hope to expand it soon. “We’d like to have more than twenty, but we’re glad to start with what we have,” he said.

A) identified

B) install

C) disclose

D) mission

E) leading

F) objection

G) surviving

H) restricted

I) affiliate

J) invisible

K) simultaneously

L)frequently

M) stake

N) miserable

O) sensible

第1空答案是:

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第10题
From the passage we know that Larry Page ().A. was born into a rich merchant familyB. was

From the passage we know that Larry Page ().

A. was born into a rich merchant family

B. was once a student in Stanford University

C. published some academic articles when young

D. was Brin's important partner in starting Google

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第11题
Water ProblemsWhere' s the water?Water. If you've got it, you probably take it for granted

Water Problems

Where' s the water?

Water. If you've got it, you probably take it for granted. But a quick look at the globe -- and a chat with the tiny group of researchers who are worrying about fresh water --- both indicate that water shortages are very serious.

And they aren't necessarily in the future, either. Here' s what we' ve read in the past week or so.

... Mexico City (home to 20 million people) is sinking because the city sucks out underground water faster than the aquifer can be refilled.

... Florida wants to refill its overpumped aquifer (蓄水层) with untreated surface water, despite federal regulations to the contrary.

... Texas is moving toward private, for-profit water sales. The water will be "mined" from aquifers that are disappearing fast. No word on what the private suppliers, including corporate raider T. Boone Pickens, will do once the aquifers run dry.

... Aquifers around the world are being overtapped for irrigated agriculture, which fills about 40 percent of the global larder.

... The Bush Administration has withdrawn a proposed tightening of the arsenic standard for drinking water. Critics say the old rule, dating to 1942, could allow thousands of cases of cancer and other diseases. Meanwhile, in Bangladesh, what' s been called the "largest poisoning of a population in history" has 35 to 77 million people drinking arsenic-laced water.

... A showdown is looming over the Tigris(底格里斯河) and Euphrates Rivers (幼发拉底河), which originate in Turkey, theft water both Syria and Iraq. If Turkey goes 'ahead with a series of dams, the downriver nations could starve.

You don' t miss your water, an old blues sage wisely said, until your well runs dry. Down here on planet Earth, the well is starting to run dry. We've seen projections that three billion people --half of today's population -- will be short of water in 2025.

Places short of water

Seen from a global water map, water is shortest in equatorial countries, often where populations are rising. Here are some examples of countries facing water shortage problem.

China, with 1.26 billion people, is "the one area worrying most people most of the time," says Marq de: Villiers, author of the recently published "Water ". In dry Northern China, he says, "the water tame is dropping one meter per year due to overpumping, and the Chinese admit that 300 cities are running short. They are diverting water from agriculture and farmers are going out of business." Some Chinese rivers are so polluted with heavy metals that they can' t be used for irrigation, he adds.

"They' re disgraceful, unusable, industrial sewers," says de Villiers. As farmers go out of business, China will have to import more food.

In India, home to 1.002 billion people, key aquifers are being overpumped, and the soil is growing saltier through contamination with irrigation water. Irrigation was a key to increasing food production in India during the green revolution, and as the population surges toward a projected 1.363 billion in 2025, its crops will continue to depend on clean water and clean soil.

Israel (population 6.2 million), invented many water-conserving technologies, but water withdrawals still exceed resupply. Overpumping of aquifers along the coast is allowing seawater to pollute drinking water. Like neighboring Jordan, Israel is largely dependent on the Jordan River for fresh water.

Water Fight

Egypt, whose population of 68 million may reach 97 million by 2025, gets essentially no rainfall. All agriculture is irrigated by seasonal floods from the Nile River, and from water stored behind the Aswan High Dam. Any interference with water flow by Sudan or Ethiopia could starve Egypt.

"The Nile is one I worry about," says Sandra Poste

A.Y

B.N

C.NG

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