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BBC·6分钟英语 | Connecting remote communities

BBC·6分钟英语 | Connecting remote communities 刚哥的运营笔记
2025-10-28
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导读:BBC 6 Minute English 是 BBC Learning English 出品的英语学习节目。
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BBC 6 Minute English 是 BBC Learning English 出品的英语学习节目。每周一期,每期约6分钟,两位主播围绕某个话题展开对话,非常适合英音爱好者模仿学习。来源:BBC,仅用于语言学习分享

Hello. This is six minute English from BBC Learning English.

I'm Neil, and I'm Sam. Now, if you're old enough to remember the early days of dial up Internet, then you'll know the unforgettable sound of the handshake, the clicks and squeaks your computer made as it struggled to connect to the Internet through the telephone line.

Yes, I remember that strange noise dial up.

Internet was slow, and websites took forever to load.

And because you couldn't use both the Internet and the telephone at the same time, this was usually followed by someone shouting, get off the computer.

I'm making a phone call. In the 30 years since then, the Internet has changed dramatically.

Fiber optics and broadband have created super fast Internet speeds and an interconnected online world where physical distances between people are no longer a barrier to communication, a situation expressed in the phrase the global village.

But take a closer look, and you'll still find people around the world with a slow connection or no Internet at all.

In this program, we'll be finding out about how some communities are working together to fix their Internet connection problems for the benefit of local people.

And of course, we'll be learning some new vocabulary too.

But before that, I have a question for you, sam.

We've been talking about the early days of the Internet, but do you know the name of the 1st ever Internet browser, the engine for searching websites?

Was it A asked Jeeves B Worldwide Webb, or C Yahoo?

I'll guess it was C Yahoo.

OK, sam, we'll find out the answer later.

You might think it's people living in the most remote and isolated places with the greatest difficulty getting online, but that's not always true.

Even here in the U-K, people struggled to connect, including BBC radio listener Katie, who explained her problem to BBC World Service program Digital Planet.

Hi, I'm Katie. I live in Dorset, in England.

Our Internet can be quite spasmodic here, and I think that that's due to most of our underground cableing is very old and somewhat dodgy, chatty and needs replacing.

Katy lives in Dorset, a rural part of Southwest England.

She describes her Internet connection as spasmodic, suddenly working, but only for a short time, and not in a regular way.

She thinks this is because her Internet cables are dodgy, slang for bad or untrustworthy.

A dodgy Internet connection might be irritating, but in other parts of the world, the consequences can be more serious.

Amahayat is a farmer who lives in the Pakistani Punjab, one of the country's most fertile regions, but also one of the least connected.

His village is a three hour drive from the nearest town, and he can't make a phone call, even with two g for armor.

Basic weather information, like knowing when rain is coming, can mean the difference between his crops succeeding or failing.

Without the Internet, he doesn't have a reliable weather report.

So the villagers decided to build their own 50 meter high telephone transmission tower, linking a network of five villages to the Internet.

Here is Ahma talking to BBC World Service program Digital Planet.

We used to do the conventional farming, like just getting information from the word of mouth.

Now I'm using latest technologies to have gadgets available with us, and taking information right from the horse mouth, you can say, through Internet and the technology we have in our hands.

So this is what I'm doing in my farm practices.

Before the community built tower, brought the Internet to his village, emma got his weather report by word of mouth, information passed on by people telling each other.

Now, there's stable Internet that works, thanks to a tower high enough to pick up a telephone signal, which it then sends into the villages via solar powered receivers, a type of gadget, meaning a small electronic device which does something useful.

This means Amma now gets his weather reports straight from the horse's mouth.

An idiom, meaning from a reliable source, or from someone who knows what they're talking about.

The Internet brings reliable, climatic information, which means a good harvest, not just for Ahmad and his family, but for all the families living in the five connected villages.

It's a great example of community action and of people looking after each other, something which may have been lost since the early, idealistic days of the Internet.

And speaking of the early Internet, it's time to answer my question.

Remember I asked you for the name of the very 1st Internet browser?

I guess it was, see, yahoo.

So was I right? You were wrong, I'm afraid, sam, way back before Google, the 1st Internet browser was called the World Wide Webb, invented by none other than cyber legend Sir Tim Berners Lee, who I think would be pleased to hear about armour's community.

Internet Yes, right. Let's recap the vocabulary we've learned about Internet connections between people living at a physical distance in the modern world, something described as the global village.

If your Internet is spasmodic, it's irregular, stopping, then suddenly working for a short time.

In other words, it's dodgy, a slang word meaning bad or unreliable.

If you know something by word of mouth, it's been passed verbally from person to person, whereas if you hear it from the horse's mouth, it's come directly from a reliable source of information.

And finally, a gadget is a small electronic device with a useful purpose.

Once again, our 6 min are up.

Bye for now. Bye.

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