时间:2018-12-29 作者:英语课 分类:英语趣味课堂


英语课
Todd: So Josh, in another interview you were talking about Google Glasses.
 
Josh: Yeah, that’s right.
 
Todd: So, what do you think about Google Glasses?
 
Josh: Google Glasses. Well, right off the bat I think privacy 1 issues.
 
Todd: Right.
 
Josh: Just because probably everyone's read the articles about how it might make there be no privacy.
 
Todd: Like well explain, like how so? How would there be no privacy?
 
Josh: Well, if everyone’s wearing these glasses and they have cameras on them, you wouldn’t know when they have their camera on and when they have it off so if you’re just talking with someone on the street they could be recording 2 you and planning some lawsuit 3 against you or anything like that. And if you're not thinking about it then for all you know they're recording whatever you're saying and they could use that against you. And it’s hard to be that careful.
 
Todd: But couldn’t you do that with another device? Like you could already do that with hidden cameras or recorders as well, right?
 
Josh: Yeah, that’s absolutely true, which is why a lot of people say it won’t be a problem. But the issue is I guess is just if everyone starts wearing them then there’s so much footage of everything that the other problem would be if that’s all running through Google servers, some people get nervous about Google being able to hand over just loads of video data to the government or to anyone who asks, right, because who knows what they do with it.
 
Todd: Yeah, that’s true. So actually, what can these glasses do? Like what are the functions of the glasses?
 
Josh: So actually, the functions are really cool and when you watch the video of how they work online, you can see that it'll put a screen in the upper left hand area of your view and it'll look like it’s floating in front of you. So then that screen that you see, you'll be able to say things like, “Take a picture” and then you’ll see a flash in front of you and then you'll see the picture save to the hard drive of the glasses. And then that screen can also display like a GPS data or it could display text messages or emails, whatever you want. And you just talk to it and you can tell it to scroll 4 down or read it to you or whatever you need it to do. So it’s like a virtual 5 assistant that you always have on.
 
Todd: That sound pretty incredible 6. What about like just depth perception 7? It seems to me that it must be really hard for your eyes to be, you know, observing something so close to it. I can’t think of anything else where you can see it and it’s that close to your eye.
 
Josh: Yeah, that’s right so they’re using these new technology in screens. I don’t remember the name but it’s a micro screen and because the pixels are so small in the screen, your eye will actually be able to pick it up well, it’s that’s close to your eye.
 
Todd: That’s incredible!
 
Josh: Yeah, absolutely.
 
Todd: So, how about these glasses, like would you want to be an early adopter?
 
Josh: I actually applied 8 to be one because last month they were going to accept 2,000 people to try them out early. And I applied, I didn’t get in. You had to have a good story for why you'd want to do that and I didn’t spend much time on it but I thought it was interesting.
 
Todd: So, what was your story? What did you tell them?
 
Josh: What was my story? Again I didn’t spend much time on them but I said that I was in Japan and that being able to travel and have that on, I could take really cool pictures and make interesting YouTube videos or whatever to help other people see what I’m seeing and be able to explore with me.
 
Todd: Yeah, that sounds like it’s pretty competitive 9. It would be pretty hard to make it the final cost?
 
Josh: Yeah.
 
Todd: So do you know the price tag on these glasses, how much they’ll cost?
 
Josh: So Google's actually put a cap on it. They said that it will be under $1500.
 
Todd: That’s it?
 
Josh: Yeah.
 
Todd: Wow! And it’s basically it has all the power of a computer?
 
Josh: All the power of a computer with a lot less memory so you will have to go to your computer and upload things. And it will also be connected to the internet. So with 3G, you'll be able to upload things to Facebook, and yeah, basically like a computer.
 
Todd: Man, that is going to be some future.
 
Josh: Yeah, interesting.
 
重点词汇:
 

Learn Vocabulary from the lesson
right off the bat
 
Well, right off the bat I think privacy issues.
 
Right off the bat refers to the first idea you get in your mind. Notice the following:
 
Can you think of a country to visit?
Right off the bat I would say Italy.
footage
 
There’s so much footage of everything
 
Footage is orginal video or film kept as a record of an event. Notice the following:
 
Sports teams like to watch footage of their games.
We watched footage of protests in the 60's.
run through
 
That’s all running through Google servers.
 
The verb phrase run through means go through. Notice the following:
 
A chill 10 ran through her body when see saw the ghost.
A river runs through the town.
hand over
 
People get nervous about Google being able to hand over just loads of video data.
 
When you hand something over, you give it to someone, usually to authorities. Notice the following:
 
Hong Kong was handed over to China in 1999.
The bank handed over it documents to the police.
pick (it) up
 
Your eye will actually be able to pick it up well.
 
When you pick something up, you locate it or find it. Notice the following:
 
My phone is cannot pick up a signal.
The new HD screens make it easy to pick up tiny little details on the screen.


1 privacy
n.私人权利,个人自由,隐私权
  • In such matters,privacy is impossible.在这类事情中,保密是不可能的。
  • She wept in the privacy of her own room.她在自己房内暗暗落泪。
2 recording
n.录音,记录
  • How long will the recording of the song take?录下这首歌得花多少时间?
  • I want to play you a recording of the rehearsal.我想给你放一下彩排的录像。
3 lawsuit
n.诉讼,控诉
  • They threatened him with a lawsuit.他们以诉讼威逼他。
  • He was perpetually involving himself in this long lawsuit.他使自己无休止地卷入这场长时间的诉讼。
4 scroll
n.卷轴,纸卷;(石刻上的)漩涡
  • As I opened the scroll,a panorama of the Yellow River unfolded.我打开卷轴时,黄河的景象展现在眼前。
  • He was presented with a scroll commemorating his achievements.他被授予一幅卷轴,以表彰其所做出的成就。
5 virtual
adj.实质上的,事实上的,实际上的
  • This reply is a virtual acceptance of our offer.这一回答实质上是接受了我们的建议。
  • At that time the East India Company was the virtual ruler of Bengal.那时东印度公司是孟加拉的实际统治者。
6 incredible
adj.难以置信的,不可信的,极好的,大量的
  • Some planets run at incredible speed.某些星球以难以置信的速度运行着。
  • Her answer showed the most incredible stupidity.她的回答显示出不可思议的愚蠢。
7 perception
n.感知,感觉,觉察(力);认识,观念,看法
  • What's your perception of the matter?你对此事有什么看法?
  • He was a man of keen perception.他是一个感觉敏锐的人。
8 applied
adj.应用的;v.应用,适用
  • She plans to take a course in applied linguistics.她打算学习应用语言学课程。
  • This cream is best applied to the face at night.这种乳霜最好晚上擦脸用。
9 competitive
adj.竞争的,比赛的,好竞争的,有竞争力的
  • Some kinds of business are competitive.有些商业是要竞争的。
  • These businessmen are both competitive and honourable.这些商人既有竞争性又很诚实。
10 chill
vt.使变冷,使冷却,使沮丧;n.寒冷,风寒
  • With the chill factor,it's nearly minus forty here.加上风寒指数,气温接近零下40度。
  • The bad news cast a chill over the whole family.这坏消息使全家人感到沮丧。
学英语单词
a dog in a blanket
aberthaws
anaplasmosis
average current queue
badly bleeding ingot
Barraute
bed coverings
Berlin, Mount
Bernulli
beta-lysin
bizelesin
boiling bed
boom point
bridge aesthetics
bronze medal
brydens
cagouls
Calamus rotang
calcium octadecanoates
cathedra
central institution
character insert mode
computed torque method
contracyclically
contributions
criminal conviction
customer select
cyclohexemal
dead sea potash
ethylamine hydriodide
fauconberg
Fischer-Tropsch wax
flight-bag
forevacuum pipe
forward tell
get short shrift from sb
grain refined zone
Granulobacter
Hadley chest
hot-gas measuring point
hurling
hypoxanthic
Inpharm
instrumentalisms
Istro-Romanians
jills off
joint strip
jurymast
knuckleballers
leporipoxvirus hare fibroma
light-coupled semiconductor switch
mealman
metal bridge
Naurskaya
neglectfully
nonother
palaeopsis diaphanella
pince-nez
plaaf
polla
potamology
power level
power operate
Prowazek-Halberstaedter bodies
pseudochromis luteus
pyroninophilia
qmi
quagging
radix arnicae
recovery heat
removal of forest litter
retirement reserve
retrogressive analysis for bridge erection
Rhynchodea
runtishly
rupture of ligament
SISOTIDAE
smiley faces
solid non-metallic impurity
specimen-transfer mechanism
spiratron electron multiplier
Stefan constant
straight scissors
sunken chest
superstars
tail lights
technoburb
think all the world of
thmd
transeptate
tubbal
unpersuasiveness
vacuum-type ash conveyer
versus analysis
wax-paper
well-beatens
whirlwind
whitewasher
wide-band cable television
wobble joint
worker-teacher
Zeis