皮皮学,免费搜题
登录
搜题
【简答题】
Passage B Directions You are going to read a passage with 10 statements attached to it. Each statement contains information given in one of the paragraphs. Identify the paragraph from which the information is derived. You may choose a paragraph more than once. Each paragraph is marked with a letter. The hothouse of entrepreneurship A In 2010, a group of students at Aalto University, just outside Helsinki (the capital of Finland) started the most constructive piece of student activism in the history of the genre. They had been fascinated by the power of entrepreneurialism during a visit to the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. When they got home they organized a "summer of start-ups" to spread the word that Finland's future lay with new companies, not old giants. The summer of start-ups turned into a season of innovation. B The Start-Up Sauna—a business accelerator that is still run by young enthusiasts but now funded by government, business, and academia—occupies a shabby warehouse next to the university. It offers a wide range of services: working space, coaching for budding entrepreneurs, study trips to Silicon Valley, and plenty of networking opportunities. C The Sauna-masters have an understanding of entrepreneurship in advance of their years. They recognize that there is more to innovation than high tech: The Sauna also has design and knitting factories. They understand the importance of bridging the gap between engineering and design. They realize that promoting entrepreneurship is a matter of changing culture as much as providing money. They look to Russia and the Baltic states as well as to Boston and San Francisco. D The student revolution was part of a wider reconsideration of the proper relationship between government and business. This had started in 2008, when the Finnish government shook up ( 改组 ) the universities in an attempt to spur innovation. But it was speeded up by Nokia's problems. Finland had become dangerously dependent on this one company: In 2000, Nokia accounted for four percent of the country's GDP. The government wanted to make the mobile phone giant's decline as painless as possible and ensure that Finland would never again become so dependent on a single company. E The Finns created an innovation and technology agency, Tekes, with an annual budget of €600 million and a staff of 360. They also established a venture-capital fund to find early-stage companies and help them get established. The centerpiece of their innovation system is a collection of business accelerators, partly funded by the government and partly by private enterprises, that operate in every significant area of business and provide potential high-growth companies with advice and support from experienced businesspeople and angel investors. F As a result, Finland has become much more market and entrepreneur-friendly. It has produced an impressive number of start-ups, including 300 founded by former Nokia employees. The fashionable argument now is that Nokia's decline is "the best thing that ever happened to this country." G The new Finland is particularly proud of its booming video-games industry, including successful companies such as Rovio Entertainment, the maker of Angry Birds and a leading supporter of the Start-Up Sauna. H The mood reflected in the summer of start-ups can be found across the region: Investors everywhere are looking for new opportunities and bright young things are running companies in converted warehouses. Hjalmar Winbladh, one of Sweden's leading entrepreneurs, says that the atmosphere has changed completely since he started out in business in the early 1990s. Back then people like him were oddities ( 怪人 ). Today fashionable young people worship successful tech entrepreneurs such as Niklas Zennström, the co-founder of Skype, and Daniel Ek and Martin Lorentzon, the co-founders of Spotify. Mr. Winbladh says that his biggest problem is to attract young talent from other start-ups. They all shudder at the thought of spending their lives in big organizations. I Northern European governments recognize that they need to encourage more entrepreneurs if they are to provide their people with high-quality jobs, and that they can no longer rely on large companies to generate business ecosystems on their own. They are creating government agencies to promote start-ups. They are encouraging universities to commercialize their ideas and generate start-ups. They are telling their schools to sing the praises of entrepreneurship. J Many of the region's most interesting entrepreneurs operate at the low end of the technology range, often to help parents deal with a practical problems of combining full-time work and family. Niklas Aronsson, co-founder of a company called Linas Matkasse, has applied IKEA's do-it-yourself model to family dinners. He delivers bags containing all the ingredients needed for a meal, chopped up, and ready to cook. Monica Lindstedt, founder of Hemfrid, is also in the business of selling time. She has turned her company into a house-cleaning giant, applying professional management to domestic cleaning and turning it into an employment perk. Hemfrid has persuaded the government to treat house-cleaning as a tax-deductible benefit, like a company car. It has also convinced companies that this is a great way to reward their employees and free them from domestic distraction. K Northern European entrepreneurs are also reinventing retirement homes for baby-boomers. A Finnish private housing association has built a housing community in the suburbs of Helsinki that is dedicated to the idea of helping people help themselves. The residents took an active part in designing both the buildings' common areas (which include saunas and exercise rooms) and their individual flats. Most of them own shares in the company. It tries to offer a balance between independent living and community involvement. The members eat together once a week and tend a communal allotment whenever they feel like it. L Despite all this entrepreneurial energy, the Northern European region still finds it hard to turn start-ups into enduring companies. There are too many examples of successful entrepreneurs who have upped sticks and gone elsewhere. These include not just members of the post-war generation such as Ingvar Kamprad, the founder of giant IKEA (who lives in Switzerland), and Hans Rausing, the founder of Tetra Pak, a huge packaging company (who went to live in England), but also members of the up-and-coming generation. Mr. Zennström, along with many of the brightest Swedish investors and entrepreneurs in his age group, lives in London. Too many successful start-ups still choose to sell themselves to foreign (mainly American) multinationals rather than becoming local champions. M Still, there is reason to hope that the entrepreneurial boom will also produce a new generation of global champions. The region's lifestyle entrepreneurs have a chance of becoming global entrepreneurs for the same reason that Mr. Kamprad did: because they are riding the wave of demographic change. And the region's high-tech entrepreneurs have a chance of founding enduring companies because they are building up businesses as well as mastering technology. N One example is Rovio Entertainment, which struck gold with Angry Birds, a game that was downloaded more than 600 million times in 2011. Having produced one big hit, most games companies would have started looking for the next one, but instead Rovio set about turning Angry Birds into a brand and extending its reach. It struck licensing agreements with a range of companies to make Angry Birds-branded products, from toys to chocolate to theme parks. It raised capital from outside investors such as Microsoft, which chipped in $42 million. Rovio now has 50 employees in Finland and had a turnover of $100 million in 2011. Michael Hed, the company's CEO, has a traditional corner office, but it is full of stuffed birds and pigs. (1,213 words) _____ 1 Governments in Northern Europe have been adopting a variety of means to promote entrepreneurship and develop new companies. _____ 2 The promotion of entrepreneurship in Finland requires not only economic support, but also the change of culture. _____ 3 Some entrepreneurs in Northern Europe are building homes for retired people in a new way. _____ 4 A large number of successful Northern European entrepreneurs of new companies would rather sell their companies to other countries than develop them locally. _____ 5 There are opportunities for entrepreneurs of lifestyle and high-tech to build long-lasting companies and become successful across the world. _____ 6 Some Finnish college students believed that new companies rather than old large ones were the foundation of Finland's future development. _____ 7 The core of the innovation system in new companies is the result of joint-funds by the Finnish government and private companies, which can be applied in every business area. _____ 8 Many entrepreneurs in Northern Europe offer services to balance work with family without relying on high technology. _____ 9 It is difficult for new Northern European companies to develop into long-lasting companies as successful entrepreneurs tend to move to other countries. _____ 10 The Finnish government intended to minimize the negative effects of Nokia's decline and never rely on just one company.
拍照语音搜题,微信中搜索"皮皮学"使用
参考答案:
参考解析:
知识点:
.
..
皮皮学刷刷变学霸
举一反三
【单选题】下列结构中,哪项不是关节的基本结构:
A.
关节盘
B.
关节面
C.
关节囊
D.
关节腔
【单选题】【梁雨晴】下列各句中,有语病的一句是( )
A.
美国同八个亚太国家就“跨太平洋战略经济伙伴协定”达成一致,该协议减少了成员国之间商品与服务关税及其他门槛.
B.
北京林业大学教师施兵通过查阅100多本教材和资料,撰写了一份近30多页的《大学英语教材质量分析报告》并直呈教育部.
C.
我们的很多地方和部门,特别是部门的负责同志,是否把消防安全放在应有的重要位置,决定着他们在安全工作中的态度和做法.
D.
大学招生所采取的“择优录取”有利于鼓励青年学生刻苦学习,努力上进,提高自身素质,积极主动地去参与公平竞争.
【多选题】下列各项中,属于正确划分各种成本耗费界限要求的有( )。
A.
正确划分收益性支出和资本性支出的界限
B.
正确划分成本费用、期间费用和营业外支出的界限
C.
正确划分各种产品成本费用的界限
D.
正确划分本期完工产品和期末在产品成本的界限
【多选题】以下关于国家主权的说法中,正确的有()
A.
国家主权是国家独立自主地处理自己的内外事务,管理自己国家的权力
B.
国家主权是国家最根本的属性
C.
国家主权对任何国家来说都是重要的,没有主权也就不称其为国家
D.
国家主权是一国公民对其国家所享有的政治、经济、文化方面的权利
【判断题】属于同一生态带内的不同地区之间,由于主要生态因子近似,彼此间相互引种时仍较易获得成功。( )
A.
正确
B.
错误
【判断题】属于同一生态带内的不同地区之间,由于主要生态因子近似,彼此间相互引种时仍较易获得成功。
A.
正确
B.
错误
【单选题】按照规定,( )任用会计人员应当实行回避制度
A.
国家机关、国有企业、事业单位
B.
国家机关、国有企业、企事业单位
C.
国有企业、企事业单位、外资企业
D.
国有企业、事业单位、外资企业
【简答题】按照规定,( )任用会计人员应当实行回避制度。
【简答题】国家主权豁免是指国家的行为及其财产不受或免受他国管辖。国家主权豁免的放弃可以分为明示放弃和默示放弃两种。关于国家主权豁免的放弃,下列说法正确的是哪项?( )
【简答题】按照规定,( )任用会计人员应当实行回避制度。
相关题目: