Silicon Valley

硅谷

新概念英语第四册 流利英语 英音

语言学习

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第 10 集

单集文稿 ...

  • Lesson 10

  • Silicon valley

  • What does the computer industry thrive on apart from anarchy?

  • Technology trends may push Silicon Valley back to the future.

  • Carver Mead, a pioneer in integrated circuits and a professor of computer science at the California Institute of Technology,

  • notes there are now workstations that enable engineers to design, test and produce chips right on their desks, much the way and editor creates a newsletter on a Macintosh.

  • As the time and cost of making a chip drop to a few days and a few hundred dollars, engineers may soon be free to let their imaginations soar without being penalized by expensive failures.

  • Mead predicts that inventors will be able to perfect powerful customized chips over a weekend at the office --

  • spawning a new generation of garage start-ups and giving the U. S. a jump on its foreign rivals in getting new products to market fast.

  • 'We've got more garages with smart people,' Mead observes. 'We really thrive on anarchy. '

  • And on Asians. Already, orientals and Asian Americans constitute the majority of the engineering staffs at many Valley firms.

  • And Chinese, Korean, Filipino and Indian engineers are graduating in droves from California's colleges.

  • As the heads of next-generation start-ups, these Asian innovators can draw on customs and languages to forge tighter links with crucial Pacific Rim markets.

  • For instance, Alex Au, a Stanford Ph. D. from Hong Kong, has set up a Taiwan factory to challenge Japan's near lock on the memory-chip market.

  • India-born N. Damodar Reddy's tiny California company reopened an AT&T chip plant in Kansas City last spring with financing from the state of Missouri.

  • Before it becomes a retirement village, Silicon Valley may prove a classroom for building a global business.