If you are in a position at work or socially where you want to make the best possible impression upon others, begin your project ______ and complete it as soon as possible.
In police work
When Mark Zuckerberg posted a picture of himself on Facebook in June, a sharp-eyed observer spotted a piece of tape covering his laptop's camera. The irony didn't go unnoticed: A man whose $350 billion company relies on users feeding it intimate details about their lives is worried about his own privacy. But Zuckerberg is smart to take precautions. Many of the cameras that can be pointed at us today are easy to spot. But researchers are developing recording devices that can hide in plain sight, some by mimicking animals. A company called AeroVironment has produced a drone that looks and flies like a humming bird. Engineers at Carnegie Mellon, NASA, and elsewhere have designed "snakebots" that can maneuver in tight spaces and could be adapted for surveillance. Robotic bugs are in development, too, and engineers at UC Berkeley and in Singapore are developing cyborg beetles—real insects that can be remote-controlled via implanted electrodes and that might someday pack cameras. With the advent of the Internet of Things, appliances and gadgets will monitor many aspects of our lives, from what we eat to what we flush. Devices we talk to will record and upload our conversations, as Amazon's Echo already does. Even toys will make us vulnerable. Kids say the darndest things, and the talking Hello Barbie doll sends those things wirelessly to a third-party server, where they are analyzed by speech-recognition software and shared with vendors. Even our thoughts could become hackable. The technology company Retinad can use the sensors on virtual-reality headsets to track user's engagement. Future devices might integrate EEG electrodes to measure brain waves. In August, Berkeley engineers announced that they had produced "neural dust," implantable electrodes just a millimeter wide that can record brain activity for scientific or medical purposes. As the data collected by all the devices around us become overwhelming, we'll increasingly rely on artificial intelligence to sift through them and make decisions, says Gary T. Marx, the author of em>Windows into the Soul: Surveillance and Society in an Age of High Technology/em>. Algorithms are already used to identify potential terrorists, as well as to generate credit ratings and parole recommendations. Chicago police use an algorithm that analyzes arrest records, social networks, and other data to identify future criminals. Soon, bots will likely guide many aspects of personnel management, such as hiring and faring. The word "sharp-eyed" in the first sentence of Paragraph One surely means ______.
The republication of the poet's most recent works will certainly ______ his national reputation.
Going out for a holiday is a good way to relax and refresh yourself, and this is especially true ______ it comes to preventing depression.
To get the ship back into full working order would ______ spending huge amounts of money and effort.
He wanted very much to run for a second term
Researchers have studied the poor as individuals
A new baby and a new job can be equally______.
Hunting is thought to be ______ for the extinction of some wildlife.
What our society suffers from most today is the absence of consensus about what it and life in it ought to be; such consensus cannot be gained from society's present stage, or from fantasies about what it ought to be. For that the present is too close and too diversified, and the future too uncertain, to make believable claims about it. A consensus in the present hence can be achieved only through a shared understanding of the past, as Homer's epics informed those who lived centuries later what it meant to be Greek, and by what images and ideals they were to live their lives and organize their societies. Most societies derive consensus from a long history, a language all their own, a common religion, common ancestry. The myths by which they live are based on all of these. But the United States is a country of immigrants, coming from a great variety of nations. Lately, it has been emphasized that an asocial, narcissistic personality has become characteristic of Americans, and that it is this type of personality that makes for the lack of well-being, because it prevents us from achieving consensus that would counteract a tendency to withdraw into private worlds. In this study of narcissism, Christopher Lash says that modern man, "tortured by self-consciousness, turns to new therapies not to free himself of his personal worries but to find meaning and purpose in life, to find something to live for". There is widespread distress because national morale has declined, and we have lost an earlier sense of national vision and purpose. Contrary to rigid religions or political beliefs, as are found in totalitarian societies, our culture is one of the great individual differences, at least in principle and in theory; but this leads to disunity, even chaos. Americans believe in the value of diversity, but just because our is a society based on individual diversity, it needs consensus about some dominating ideas more than societies based on uniform origin of their citizens. Hence, if we are to have consensus, it must be based on a myth—a vision about a common experience, a conquest that made us Americans, as the myth about the conquest of Troy formed the Greeks. Only a common myth can offer relief from the fear that life is without meaning or purpose. Myths permit us to examine our place in the world by comparing it to a shared idea. Myths are shared fantasies that form the tie that binds the individual to other members of his group. Such myths help to ward off feelings of isolations, guilt, anxiety, and purposelessness—in short, they combat isolation and the breakdown of social standards and values. In the eyes of the author, the greatest trouble with the US society may lie in ______.
The fuel of the continental missile is supposed to be ______ by this device.
The leaders of the two countries feel it desirable to ______ funds from armaments to health and education.
The joys of travel
Tim is dubious about diet pills which advertise quick weight loss.
For several years
Dozens of scientific groups all over the world have been ______ the goal of a practical and economic way to use sunlight to split water molecules.
Jack was about to announce our plan but I______.
All the commodities sold in that shop are given one year's______.
