Tech that refuses to die ⏲️ 6 Minute English

9,725 views ・ 2024-10-17

BBC Learning English


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00:08
Hello, this is 6 Minute English from BBC Learning English.
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I'm Phil. And I'm Georgie.
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The exciting thing about technology is that it's always changing.
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Can you remember when computer floppy disks, handheld Game Boys,
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and fax machines were in fashion?
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Do you still have a Walkman cassette player from the 1980s?
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Today, technology progresses so quickly
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that old tech soon becomes obsolete, no longer in use,
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having been replaced by something better or more fashionable.
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So, you might be surprised to hear that, until recently, the government
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of Japan still used three and a half inch floppy disks to store official documents;
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that around the world, music cassettes and Walkmans are making a comeback;
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and even the world famous Swiss CERN physics laboratory uses
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old fashioned magnetic tape reels to record its data.
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Yes, it seems that some old technology just refuses to die.
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Maybe because people still love it,
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or maybe because of the old English proverb 'if it ain't broke,
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don't fix it',
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meaning that things should only be changed if they don't work.
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So, in this programme, we'll be hearing about old tech
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which continues to be used today.
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And as usual, we'll be learning some useful new vocabulary as well.
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But first, I have a question for you, Georgie.
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Computers have seen some of the biggest advances in technology,
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but what was the name of the first computer developed for home use
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in the UK?
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Was it a. the Commodore 64 b. the Sinclair ZX80 or c. the BBC Micro?
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Hmm. I'll guess it was the Commodore 64.
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OK, Georgie, we'll find out if that's the correct answer
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later in the programme.
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One reason for not updating tech is if the original design still works well.
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NASA engineer Jonathan Sauder designed HAR-V,
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a mechanical rover able to survive the inhospitable conditions
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on Venus, where temperatures reached 460C.
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Here's Jonathan talking to BBC World Service programme, Tech Life.
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Venus has a very long night.
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It's actually about 60 days long that you're in total darkness.
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So that's where we came up with the concept for HAR-V,
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a mechanical clockwork rover that can be powered by Venus's winds
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in order to allow it to survive Venus's long, hot nights.
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Conditions on Venus mean that ordinary electronics simply won't work.
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That's why Jonathan built a clockwork rover, a machine with springs
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and wheels inside
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which works when it's wound up with a key. Clockwork technology
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from the first century being used in 2024 by NASA!
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Other tech which refuses to die
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is just too much trouble to change.
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For example, countries around the world use different electrical plugs,
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which would be better to standardise,
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but imagine the work involved.
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Here, Chris Vallance, presenter of BBC World Service's Tech Life,
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discusses a similar example with Dr Tacye Phillipson,
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science curator at the National Museum of Scotland.
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Another piece of tech that people say has sort of refused to die
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is the QWERTY keyboard,
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the layout of keyboards that we all have,
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and it's perhaps not the most efficient layout in terms of the speed of typing.
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It's the layout we're all really, really used to, though,
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and if you see court reporters, stenographers,
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they have special keyboards and can type so fast to take down verbatim,
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but they also look very complicated.
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And I don't actually want to learn to use one of those,
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so I'll stick with QWERTY for the moment.
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Chris and Tacye discussed QWERTY,
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the traditional typewriter arrangement of keys on a computer keyboard,
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in which the top line begins with the letters Q, W, E, R, T,
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and Y. In terms of being able to type quickly,
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QWERTY isn't the best.
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In fact, court reporters type much faster with alternative keyboards.
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Court reporters need to type fast to record cases verbatim,
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using exactly the same words that were originally spoken.
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But because everyone is used to QWERTY keyboards, the tech lives on.
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That's why Tayce says she'll stick with QWERTY,
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she'll continue using it and not change to something else.
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And speaking of QWERTY keyboards has reminded me of my question, Georgie.
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Yes, you asked me the name of the first home computer released in the UK,
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and I guessed it was the Commodore 64.
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Which was the wrong answer, I'm afraid!
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In fact, the UK's first home computer was the Sinclair ZX80,
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which was released in 1980 and used a whopping four kilobyte memory.
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That's about half an email.
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OK, it's time to recap the vocabulary we've learnt in this programme,
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starting with 'obsolete' meaning no longer in use,
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having been replaced by something newer or better.
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The idiom 'if it ain't or isn't broke, don't fix it' is used to say
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that if something is working, there's no reason to try to change it.
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Clockwork machinery uses metal springs and wheels which move
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when they're wound up with a key.
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QWERTY refers to the traditional typewriter arrangement of keys,
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in which the top line begins with the letters Q, W, E, R, T, and Y.
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If you say something verbatim,
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you use exactly the same words that were originally used.
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And finally, to 'stick with something' means to continue using or doing it.
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Once again, our six minutes are up, but remember to join us again next time
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for more trending topics and useful vocabulary here at 6 Minute English.
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06:04
Goodbye for now. Bye.
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