.


:




:

































 

 

 

 





: ( ), .

 

micro process or

 

- ().

:

anti [´ænti] - antivirus
in -, im-, il-, ir- illogical, invisible ,
mis - misunderstand
non [nɔn] - non-volatile
un [Ʌn] - unformatted

 

:

extra (, ) extranet ( , , ..)
inter () interaction, Internet ,
intra () intranet ( )
tele ( ) teleconferene ()
trans [træn]/ [trɑːn-] - () transatlantic
sub [sʌb] - (, ) submarine

 

 

, :

micro [`maikrou] - microbrowser ( )
semi - [`semi] semiconductor
super - supercomputer (, )
over (-, -) overuse
under (-, ) underestimate ,

 

:

cyber - [`saibə] cyberspace
de ( ) decrypt
dis- (-, -, -) disconnect
e () e-commerce
en- (em-) embedded encrypt
re- (, ) recharge
up - update

 

. 6. .

1. enable (v) a)
2. debug (v) b)
3. undergraduate (n) c)
4. disable (v) d)
5. postgraduate (n) e)
6. reassemble (v) f)
7. non-delivery g)
8. teleworking h)

 

. 7. , .

(city), (process), (charge), (aircraft), / (code), (scale), (grade), (heat), (cellular), (automatic).

 

Words and phrases for learning.

To found, to be named after, to develop, a wave, transmission, a transmitter, an electronic tube, a network, a switching system, radio communication, a device, extra-mural education, a post-graduate course, to carry out, to borrow, an extranet, an intranet, a semiconductor, to decrypt/encrypt, to recharge, to update.

 

 

3 Scientists and inventors

.

- . , , .

 

4 :

I 1) m e, g o;

2) , , e l a- ke, n o- se, v i -ne.

( , ).

II 1) , p o t;

2) , l i ttle.

( ).

III + r 1) r, c ar;

2) + r g i rl.

( ).

IV + r + . +r 1) , - care, here;

2) Mary.

 

( ( ) , i - ).

, .

 

4- :

  I II . III + r IV + r +
a [ei]take, skate, brave [æ] lamp, that, hand [a:]car, charge, march [ɛə]/ [eə] square, care
e [i:]these, Swede, cede [e]desk, spend, text [ə:]/[ɜ:] her, term, nerve [iə] here, sphere
u [ju:]huge, cube, dupe [ʌ] but, bulb, bus [ə:]/[ɜ:] purl, hurt, burn [juə] cure, lure
i/y [ai ]drive, wide, size [i]sit, little, gyp [ə:]/[ɜ:] girl, first, bird [aiə] fire, tire, hire
o [ou]/[əu]/[əʊ] stone, slope, woke [ɒ]/ [ɔ] stop, spot, box [ɔ:] form, storm, north [ɔ:]more, store, core

. 1. 4-, .

A: plate, flag, spark, fare. O: close, job, short, spore. E: scene, pen, serve, here. U: use, must, curve, pure. Y/ I: type, hint, Byrd, wire.

. / .

 

:

l+ . [ɔ:] also, fall, talk
l + . m, f, v [a:] half, calm
l + . . [ɔ:] chalk, walk, talk, always
n + [a:] answer, can't. But!hand
s + . [a:] class, last, task
th [a:] bath, father
f + . [a:] staff, craft
w [ɔ:][ɒ] want, wall

. 2. , .

Tall, plant, ask, was, call, father, all, small, fast, pass, install, shaft, warm, path, rather.

a w:

aw au ai ay
[ɔ:] [ɔ:] [ei] [ei]
law, saw, auto, autumn plain, pain may, say

. 3. a , .

Flaw, fault, audio, launch, author, main, domain, draw, mail, play, way.

 

:

e d, l (th) ear ei gh eu, ew   ey  
[e] [ə:] [ei] [(j)u:] [ei]
bread health weather earth learn heard eight weight weigh few new neutral convey they But! key [i:]

 

. 4. e , .

Head, spread, death, earn, search, heard, grew, few, grey, news, thread, steady.

i :

ie igh, ign i + ld i+ nd
[i:] [ai] [ai] [ai]
brief, chief, field light, might, sign child, wild, mild kind, find, mind

 

. 5. i , .

Design, believe, assign, high, piece, bright, resign, right, highlight, remind.

 

:

oi, oy [ɔi] boil, oil, toil, boy, joy, toy
o + ld [ou] bold, gold, hold
+ [u] book, look, hook
oo [u:] moon, soon, too
r [ɔ:] door, floor. But! poor
ou [au] found, pound, round
ough +t [ɔ:] ought, brought, fought
ough [ʌf] enough
our [ɔ:] course, source, resource
o+m, n, th, v [ʌ] some, none, mother/cover
ow [ou] blow, slow, below
ow [au] down, cow, how
w + or [ə:] work, word, world

. 6. o , .

Load, flow, grow, road, round, sound, down, about, mouse, loop, cool, worm, worse, mountain, son, show, how, company, bought, founder, tool, coin, sought, rough, tough, other, reboot.

 

. 7. .

 

Steve Jobs

Steven Paul Jobs, an inventor, computer programmer and businessman, was born in California, USA, on 24 February, 1955. His biological parents were university graduate students and gave him up for adoption. The infant was adopted by Clara and Paul Jobs and named Steven Paul Jobs.

The family lived in Mountain View within California's Silicon Valley. As a boy, Jobs and his father would work on electronics in the family garage. Paul would show his son how to take apart and reconstruct electronics. When Steve Jobs was 13 he met computer club guru Steve Wozniak. Wozniak was a brilliant computer engineer, and the two developed great respect for one another.

In 1976, when Jobs was just 21, he and Wozniak started Apple Computers. Jobs and Wozniak are credited with revolutionizing the computer industry by democratizing the technology and making the machines smaller, cheaper, intuitive, and accessible to everyday consumers.

There is a story that Steve Jobs had the idea for a home computer when he was picking apples in an orchard in Oregon. He looked at the apple in his hand and decided to call his future company Apple.

The company grew very fast. Seven years later, Jobs introduced the Macintosh computer in a brilliant demonstration that he gave himself. However the sales of the first Macs were disappointing. This led to tensions in the company, and in 1985 he resigned.

In 1986, Jobs bought Pixar Animation Studios. This corporation produced the first full-length completely computer-animated film Toy Story, in 1995. After trying a few different presidents, the Apple management realized that they needed Steve Jobs and asked him to come back. He accepted and started adding colour to the company. Until 1998, all computers were grey or beige. Steve changed all that with brightly coloured iMacs, egg-shaped computers that offered high-speed processing at a reasonable price. Then came iTunes, the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad. Apple became a popular company once again.

On October 5, 2011, Apple Inc. announced that co-founder Steve Jobs had died. He was 56 years old at the time of his death.

 

. 8. .

a) Who was Steve Jobs?

b) What did his father teach Steve?

c) What was Steve Wozniaks occupation then?

d) When did the two men start their company?

e) Why was Steve Jobs pushed out of Apple?

f) What did Jobs do when he returned to Apple?

g) How did Jobs and Wozniak influence the computer industry?

 

. 9. , .

held resigned put forward was honoured started best known came became involved deeply attracted

 

1. In 1933 Norbert Wiener was elected to the National Academy of Science (USA), from which he ____________________ in 1941.

2. In 1940, Norbert Wiener ___________ to work on a research project on anti-aircraft ( ) devices.

3. The idea of cybernetics __________ to Norbert Wiener when he began to consider the ways in which machines and human minds work.

4. Norbert Wiener was ________________ to mathematical physics.

5. Niels Bohr is _________________for the development of the Bohr model of the atom.

6. Just before World War II, Bohr ________________ a theory of nuclear fission.

7. In America Niels Bohr __________________ in the Atomic Energy Project which aimed to build the first atomic bomb.

8. Niels Bohr ___________ many important positions and ____________ by many important scientific institutions.

 

. 10. .

: Jobs and Wozniak are credited with revolutionizing the computer industry by democratizing the technology - Jobs and Wozniak are best known for revolutionizing the computer industry by democratizing the technology.

1. Steve Jobs had the idea for a home computer when he was picking apples in an orchard in Oregon.

2. Jobs introduced the Macintosh computer in a brilliant demonstration that he gave himself.

3. Norbert Wieners first important position was that of Instructor of Mathematics at Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

4. Norbert Wiener was greatly interested in many different disciplines.

5. Ernest Rutherford proposed the concept of a nucleus within the atom.

 





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