单选题 For office innovators, the unrealized dream of the "paperless" office is a classic example of high-tech hubris(傲慢). Today's office drone is drowning in more paper than ever before.But after decades of hype, American offices may finally be losing their paper obsession. The demand for paper used to outstrip the growth of the US economy, but the past two or three years have seen a marked slowdown in sales — despite a healthy economic scene. Analysts attribute the decline to such factors as advances in digital databases and communication systems. Escaping our craving for paper, however, will be anything but an easy affair. " Old habits are hard to break," says Merilyn Dunn, a communications supplies director. " There are some functions that paper serves where a screen display doesn't work. Those functions are both its strength and its weakness. " In the early to mid-1990s, a booming economy and improved desktop printers helped boost paper sales by 6 to 7 percent each year. The convenience of desktop printing allowed office workers to indulge in printing anything and everything at very little effort or cost. But now, the growth rate of paper sales in the United States is flattening by about half a percent each year. Between 2004 and 2005, Ms. Dunn says, plain white office paper will see less than a 4 percent growth rate, despite the strong overall economy. A primary reason for the change, says Dunn, is that for the first time ever, some 47 percent of the workforce entered the job market after computers had already been introduced to offices. "We're finally seeing a reduction in the amount of paper being used per worker in the workplace," says John Maine, vice president of a pulp and paper economic consulting firm. " More information is being transmitted electronically, and more and more people are comfortable with the information residing only in electronic form without printing multiple backups. " In addition, Mr. Maine points to the lackluster employment market for white-collar workers — the primary driver of office paper consumption for the shift in paper usage. The real paradigm shift may be in the way paper is used. Since the advent of advanced and reliable office-network systems, data storage has moved away from paper archives. The secretarial art of "filing" is disappearing from job descriptions. Much of today's data may never leave its original digital format. The changing attitudes toward paper have finally caught the attention of paper companies, says Richard Harper, a researcher at Microsoft. " All of a sudden, the paper industry has started thinking, 'We need to learn more about the behavioural aspects of paper use, '" he says. "They had never asked, they'd just assumed that 70 million sheets would be bought per year as a literal function of economic growth. " To reduce paper use, some companies are working to combine digital and paper capabilities. For example, Xerox Corp. is developing electronic paper: thin digital displays that respond to a stylus, like a pen on paper. Notations can be erased or saved digitally. Another idea, intelligent paper, comes from Anoto Group. It would allow notations made with a stylus on a page printed with a special magnetic ink to simultaneously appear on a computer screen. Even with such technological advances, the improved capabilities of digital storage continue to act against " paperlessness," argues Paul Saffo, a technology forecaster. In his prophetic and metaphorical 1989 essay, " The Electronic Pinata(彩罐)," he suggests that the increasing amounts of electronic data necessarily require more paper. The information industry today is like a huge electronic pinata, composed of a thin paper crust surrounding an electronic core, " Mr. Saffo wrote. The growing paper crust "is most noticeable, but the hidden electronic core that produces the crust is far larger — and growing more rapidly. The result is that we are becoming paperless, but we hardly notice at all. " In the same way that digital innovations have increased paper consumption, Saffo says, so has video conferencing — with its promise of fewer in-person meetings — boosting business travel. "That's one of the great ironies of the information age," Saffo says. "It's just common sense that the more you talk to someone by phone or computer, it inevitably leads to a face-to-face meeting. The best thing for the aviation industry was the Internet. "
单选题 What function does the second sentence in the first paragraph serve?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:推理题。文章首句说:“对办公室的创新者来讲,‘无纸’办公室这一尚未实现的梦想是一种典型的高科技傲慢表现”,第二句话接着说“今天的办公室正逐渐被有史以来最多的纸淹没”,这正是傲慢的表现和后果,因此该句的作用是为了证实“high-tech hubris”。
单选题 Which of the following is NOT a reason for the slowdown in paper sales?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:细节题。文章第二段第二句说:过去,人们对纸的需求增长超过美国经济的增长速度,但在近两三年里,尽管有健康的经济局面,纸张销售却产生了明显下降”,因此B项正确。
单选题 The two innovations by Xerox Corp. and Anoto Group feature______.
【正确答案】 A
【答案解析】解析:推理题。文章第十一段提到,为了减少用纸,一些公司致力于将数字和纸的性能相结合,接着以施乐公司和安诺拓集团为例进行说明,故本题选A。
单选题 What does the author mean by "irony of the information age"?
【正确答案】 C
【答案解析】解析:推理题。文章倒数第二段说到:数字化的革新实际上增加了纸的消耗。这与C选项吻合,故本题答案为C。
单选题 What is the author's attitude towards "paperlessness"?
【正确答案】 B
【答案解析】解析:态度题。文章第三段话第二句说:作者认为不能忽略人们对纸的渴求,并在接下来的段落里引用Merilyn Dunn的话来加以证明。在文章结尾的四段中,作者也多处引用PaulSaffo的话,认为更多地靠科技手段没有减少反而增加了人们对纸的使用。因此只能说作者同意文中的部分(some)观点。