旺旺首页 > 英语 > VOA美国之音 > 特别英语慢速英语 > ECONOMICS REPORT > Electronics Industry Hopes for a Reset in 2010
更新时间:2010/1/8
 » Download Audio

3-D TV, digital tablets and Google's new phone could help in recovering from a bad year. Thousands of new products are being presented at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.

This is the VOA Special English Economics Report.

This year's Consumer Electronics Show opened Thursday in Las Vegas. The event is the world's biggest technology trade show.

More than three hundred companies are presenting more than twenty thousand new products. The goal is to build excitement, make deals -- and hopefully get good reviews in the media. Industry sales dropped eight percent last year during the recession.

Gary Shapiro, president of the Consumer Electronics Association, predicted that one area of strong sales this year will be mobile phones. That includes fifty-two million smartphones expected to be sold in the United States. Smartphones run applications and access the Internet.

Google is launching the Nexus One -- which it calls a "superphone." This is its first attempt to sell its own device. The Nexus One will compete with Apple's popular iPhone.

Apple is reportedly about to introduce a new digital tablet. Tablets are easy-to-hold screens that let you read and watch media or search the Web. An example is the Amazon Kindle. Like netbooks, tablets cost less than traditional laptop computers. But that can also mean smaller profits for manufacturers and sellers.  

A 3-D movie is shown at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada
A 3-D movie is shown at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, Nevada
Companies like Sony and Panasonic are introducing new television sets for watching three-dimensional TV. A three-D TV costs more than three thousand dollars. Americans are expected to buy four million of them this year. Sports broadcaster ESPN and the Discovery Channel plan to start their own three-D channels.

The Consumer Electronics Show has an area for companies to demonstrate products that save energy, reduce waste and use recycled materials. Show spokeswoman Jennifer Bemisderfer says the Sustainable Planet Tech Zone is four times bigger than last year.

She says manufacturers are increasingly interested in the idea of "cradle-to-cradle" technology. That involves thinking about a product's whole lifetime.

JENNIFER BEMISDERFER: "When those products are at the end of their useful life, how are they going to be broken down? How are we going to get some of the essential elements out of those products and have them reused in the manufacturing process?"

Interest is also growing in energy management systems for the home -- and safe driving technologies for the car. These include voice-activated systems that let drivers make calls and send text messages without using their hands. Other products warn drivers if they are falling asleep or in danger of an accident.

And that's the VOA Special English Economics Report, written by Mario Ritter. I'm Steve Ember.

相关主题链接:
Americans Sing the Praises of TV's 'Glee'
Shakespeare Was a Producer and Actor and, Oh Yes, a Writer
How Loneliness Can Infect Social Networks
There Is a Lot More to Snow Than Just Six Sides
New Alliance to Study Greenhouse Gases in Agriculture
White Sands National Monument: A Wonder of Nature
New Treatment for Sleeping Sickness
William Faulkner, 1897-1962: He was America's Greatest Southern Writer
Words and Their Stories: Nicknames for Los Angeles
The Economy Was Top News Story of 2009
2009: Best Year for Movies in US History
Banks Recover, But the Economy Struggles in 2009