-
You need to recommend a high-availability solution for the file servers in Branch2 that supports the museum's planned changes What should you include in the recommendation?()
A . a standalone Distributed File System (DFS) namespace and DFS Replication
B . a domain-based Distributed File System (DFS) namespace and DFS Replication
C . Failover Clustering and Clustered Shared Volumes
D . Network Load Balancing (NLB) and Storage Manager
-
You need to recommend a backup solution for the VMs that meets the museum's technical requirements. What should you include in the recommendation?()
A . On each VM, perform a full server backup by using Windows Server Backup.
B . On each physical node, perform a full server backup by using Windows Server Backup.
C . Deploy Microsoft System Center Data Protection Manager 2010 and create a new protection group.
D . Deploy Microsoft System Center Virtual Machine Manager (VMM) 2008 R2 and schedule checkpoints.
-
You need to recommend an access solution for the users in the sales department that meets the museum's technical requirements. What should you include in the recommendation?()
A . BranchCache in Distributed Cache mode
B . BranchCache in Hosted Cache mode
C . offline files
D . transparent caching
-
If Newton lived today, he would be surprised by what ____ in science and technology.
-
阅读附件的文章回答下列问题:In paragraph E, the writer suggests that some museum exhibits
-
National Museum of Scotland lies in ( ).
-
The British Museum in London is a museum of human history,culture and natural science.
-
The security guard ( ) two men that were quarreling in the museum.
-
Kulangsu has the first piano museum and only organ museum in China.
-
The museum is designed in such a way that it stands in perfect harmony with its surroundings.
-
Science and technology have ___ in ?
Science and technology have ___ in important ways to the improvement of agricultural production.
<span style="font-weight:bold">A) attached B) assisted C) contributed D) witnessed</span>
-
With the development in science and technology ?
<span style="color:464646">With the development in science and technology man can make various flowers ____________ before their time.</span>
<span style="font-size:13px;color:464646">A) be bloomed B) bloom C) bloomed D)blooming</span>
-
For decades, Americans have taken for granted the United States’ leadership position in the development of new technologies. The innovations (创新) that resulted from research and development during World War II and afterwards were 36 to the prosperity of the nation in the second half of the 20th century. Those innovations, upon which virtually all aspects of 37 society now depend, were possible because the United States then 38 the world in mathematics and science education. Today, however, despite increasing demand for workers with strong skills in mathematics and science, the 39 of degrees awarded in science, math, and engineering are decreasing.
The decline in degree production in what are called the STEM disciplines (science, technology, engineering, and math) seems to be 40 related to the comparatively weak performance by U.S. schoolchildren on international assessments of math and science. Many students entering college have weak skills in mathematics. According to the 2005 report of the Business-Higher Education Forum, 22 percent of college freshmen must take remedial (补习的) math 41 , and less than half of the students who plan to major in science or engineering 42 complete a major in those fields.
The result has been a decrease in the number of American college graduates who have the skills, 43 in mathematics, to power a workforce that can keep the country at the forefront (前沿) of innovation and maintain its standard of living. With the 44 performance of American students in math and science has come increased competition from students from other countries that have strongly supported education in these areas. Many more students earn 45 in the STEM disciplines in developing countries than in the United States.
A) accelerating
B) actually
C) closely
D) contemporary
E) courses
F) critical
G) declining
H) degrees
I) especially
J) future
K) led
L) met
M) procedures
N) proportions
O) spheres
-
Modem museums came into existence in order to______.
A.protect royal and church treasures
B.improve existing collections
C.stimulate public interest
D.raise more funds
此题为多项选择题。
-
Lots of weapons are on show in museums.
A.Right.
B.Wrong.
C.Doesn't say.
-
—— Today’s Sunday. What about going to the Science Museum?<br class="markdown_return">——().
A、 Take it easy
B、 Let’s call it a day
C、 That’s a good idea
D、 It’s kind of you to say so
-
Ancient Greece formed the foundation of Western culture today, and everything from government, philosophy, science and even sports was impacted by the Ancient Greeks. _________
对
错
-
To get a sense of how women have progressed in science, take a quick tour of the physics department at the University of California, Berkeley. This is a storied place, the 36 of some of the most important discoveries in modern science—starting with Ernest Lawrence’s invention of the cyclotron (回旋加速器) in 1931. A generation ago, female faces were 37 and, even today, visitors walking through the first floor of LeConte Hall will see a full corridor of exhibits 38 the many distinguished physicists who made history here, 39 all of them white males.
But climb up to the third floor and you’ll see a 40 display. There, among the photos of current faculty members and students, are portraits of the 41 head of the department, Marjorie Shapiro, and four other women whose research 42 everything from the mechanics of the universe to the smallest particles of matter. A sixth woman was hired just two weeks ago. Although they’re still only about 10 percent of the physics faculty, women are clearly a presence here. And the real 43 may be in the smaller photos to the right: graduate and undergraduate students, about 20 percent of them female. Every year Berkeley sends its fresh female physics PhDs to the country’s top universities. That makes Shapiro optimistic, but also 44 . “I believe things are getting better,” she says, “but they’re not getting better as 45 as I would like.”
A) circumstance
B) confidence
C) covers
D) current
E) deals
F) different
G) exposing
H) fast
I) honoring
J) hope
K) presently
L) rare
M) realistic
N) site
O) virtually
-
阅读短文,
W:What about going to visit the Science Museum today ,Tom?
M:I'm afaid we can't .It opens only from 2:00 to 5:00 on Sunday
afternoons.
W:You mean we have to wait until tomorrow
M:I guess so.
Q:What day is it today ( )
A.Tuesday B.Thursday C.Saturday.
说明理由~
-
There’s in today's newspaper().
A、 important anything
B、 important something
C、 anything important
D、 something important
-
In the history of arts patronage(资助,赞助), entrepreneurs-turned-connoisseurs(艺术品鉴赏家,行家) are a young development. The world's greatest museums the Louvre, Hermitage, Prado began as lavish civilization-is-power statements by monarchs and emperors; private individuals did not emerge as significant museum patrons before the 19th century. Until a generation ago. those wanting to leave their mark in bricks usually did so in a room of their own in a state museum: the Duveen Galleries at Tate Britain, the Abby Aldrich Rockefeller Gallery at New York's Museum of Modern Art. But in the past 15 years, that has changed: worldwide, collectors seek immortality in glass and steel, through a museum of their own, designed by an architect of their choosing.
These are not latter-day Henry Tates or Pavel Tretyakovs, democratic visionaries who paid for buildings and donated core collections to kick-start evolving national, state-run institutions. Museum builders of the 1990s and 2000s, by contrast, are products of late capitalism, dedicated to more personal projects, with an individualistic flavor. They represent the legacy of Thatcher-Reagan words of choice, private philanthropy (慈善机构), me-generation celebrity.
Together, these and scores more bring diversity and flatten old geographical hierarchies. In Istanbul, collector Sakip Sabanci's museum, founded in 2002, is the first ever to show western modernism in Turkey. Thanks to Dominique de Menil, the greatest collection of paintings by Cy Twombly, who lives in Italy, is on permanent show in Houston, Texas, in a gallery designed in 1995 by Renzo Piano. In 1996 the late collector and dealer Heinz Berggmen launched his Museum Berggruen in Berlin, giving Germany its only Picasso collection.
Is all for the best in the best of all possible worlds? Certainly, more private museums mean more art on display for more people to see. Today's collectors are reluctant to bequeath (遗赠) to established museums, where space shortages mean works may go straight into storerooms and stay there. By contrast, a dedicated museum maintains the integrity of a collection, keeping together outstanding groups of works, assembled with personal flair, in buildings designed to enhance them. Renzo Piano's light, see-through 1997 construction for Ernst Beyeler's cherry-picked modernist paintings in Basel is the shining European example. For contemporary work, private collectors have particular advantages: free of state bureaucracy, they can respond quickly to the fast pace, and show work in ways that are too radical for traditional museums.
How did the Louvre, Hermitage, and Prado museums originate according to the passage?
A.Donations of the richest collectors.
B.Patronage of private individuals.
C.Collections of connoisseurs.
D.Encouragements and approval by rulers.
-
Among the most popular books being written today are those which are usually classified as science fiction. Hundreds of titles are published every year and are read by all kinds of people.Furthermore,
A、Hundreds of titles are published every year.
B、All kinds of people love it.
C、Some of the most successful films of recent years have been based on science fiction stories.
D、Science fiction can be found in books written hundreds of years ago.
-
The museum in his hometown has collected and kept the artists best paintings.()
A.A.simple sentence
B.B.compound sentence
C.C.complex sentence
D.D.compound-complex sentence
-
The exhibit in the museum tells us about______.
A.the stories of Jews in the Second World War
B.how some of the Jewish children survived the Holocaust
C.how some Jewish children were tortured by the Nazis
D.the life of the survivors of the Holocaust