Another day begins with the call of the phone’s alarm,
Where are you? Open your eyes. Turn the alarm off and you will start working
out on your apps(应用软件).
First
stop, weather: Sunny day.
Look outside the window. Oh, no, it isn’t. Second
stop, Air Quality Index: 344, dangerous, Level 6 Severely Polluted. Mental
recheck required: It really is a sunny day and the weather app isn’t lying or
in need of being replaced, it’s just that you can’t see the sun through the
thick fog. Note to self: Cycling to work is out, face mask is in.
Has the world stopped turning? News app merely
confirms that it’s business as usual. Another government has fallen, your
soccer team has lost again, and China’s economy is still increasing steadily.
Diary
app informs you of all the things you failed to do the previous day and
loads you up with another half-dozen tasks. Next, browse a couple of social
networking apps to determine the status updates of friends.
Another sound from the phone, it’s
a message from your significant friend who is already at work, saying the
Taobao. com order for Italian cheese is about to arrive.
Apps have become part of our
“every-moment” lives. Apps provide so much information. But the dark side to all this connectivity would
be lack of privacy, being a slave to the app. The only real problem is that
once you lose your smartphone, you lose your life.
Some
friends and family do not have smartphones, but prefer the old-fashioned Nokia
that merely makes phone calls and sends instant messages. While I respect
their purity and desire to be free of the control of technology, it’s obvious
they are outsiders, and their lives are loaded up with paper and old devices.
They’re still buying books at stores, complaining the lack of CDs on the
market, watching TV and missing out on complete news cycles. Though I would
add, they have lives that aren’t spent inside small screens.
My phone is a palm-sized one-stop shop and about the
only thing it doesn’t do is teleport(心灵运输). What’s not to like?
1.The functions of
apps mentioned in the passage can be listed as follows EXCEPT that _______.
A. the apps can show you weather forecast
B. the apps can tell you how to work directly
C. the apps can inform you the latest news
D. the apps can tell you what you failed to do
2. According to the passage, the author thinks that
_______.
A. people’s life is governed by apps
B. people feel bored about the use of apps
C. people can’t live without apps
D. people hate apps with powerful functions
3.It can be inferred from the last paragraph but one
that _______.
A. more and more people like Nokia more than apps
B. using Nokia can be free of the control of
technology
C. all people don’t like the advanced smartphones
D. ordinary people don’t like shopping online