西那卡塞通过与下列哪项结合发挥其作用() A.钙 B.磷 C.钙受体 D.维生素D受

来源:www.tikuol.com 发布时间:2018-04-26 11:28
题型:单项选择题

问题:

西那卡塞通过与下列哪项结合发挥其作用()

A.钙

B.磷

C.钙受体

D.维生素D受体

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题型:填空题

开关柜带电二次回路对地距离应>()。

题型:填空题

一个容积为10 L的气缸内有密度为1.5 kg/m3的氧气,现用活塞将氧气的体积压缩为4 L,则压缩后氧气的密度为__________ kg/m3

题型:选择题

“正义不仅应当被发现,还应当以看得见的方式被发现。” 为了确保把人民的权力用来为人民谋福利,必须对权力进行有效制约和监督,其关键是

A.完善行政监督体系

B.加强新闻舆论和社会公众的监督

C.加强法制对权力的制约和监督

D.健全权力运行的制约和监督体系

题型:单项选择题

Years ago, when I first started building websites for newspapers, many journalists told me that they saw the Internet as the end of reliable journalism. Since anyone could publish whatever they wanted online, "real journalism" would be overwhelmed, they said. Who would need professional reporters and editors if anyone could be a reporter or an editor I would tell them not to worry. While my personal belief is that anyone can be a reporter or editor, I also know that quality counts. And that the "viral" nature of the Internet means that when people find quality, they let other people know about it. Even nontraditional media sites online will survive only if the quality of their information is trusted. The future of online news will demand more good reporters and editors, not fewer.
So I was intrigued when Newsweek recently published a story called Revenge of the Expert. It argued that expertise would be the main component of "Web 3.0". "The wisdom of the crowds has peaked," says Jason Calacanis, founder of the Maholo "people-powered search engine" and a former AOL executive. "Web 3.0 is taking what we’ve built in Web 2.0—the wisdom of the crowds—and putting an editorial layer on it of truly talented, compensated people to make the product more trusted and refined." Well, yes and no. Sure, it is important for people to trust the information they find online. And as the Newsweek article argues, the need for people to find trusted information online is increasing, thus the need for more expertise. But the article fails to mention the most important feature of the world of digital information. It’s not expertise—it’s choice.
In many cases the sites that people come to trust are built on nontraditional models of expertise. Look at sites like Digg. com, Reddit. com, or Slashdot. com. There, users provide the expertise on which others depend. When many users select a particular story, that story accumulates votes of confidence, which often lead other users to choose that story. The choices of the accumulated community are seen as more trustworthy than the "gatekeeper" model of traditional news and information. Sometimes such sites highlight great reporting from traditional media. But often they bring forward bits of important information that are ignored (or missed) by "experts". It’s sort of the "open source" idea of information—a million eyes looking on the Web for information is better than a few.
Jay Rosen, who writes the PressThink blog, says in an e-mail that he’s seen this kind of story before, calling it a "kind of pathetic" trend reporting. "I said in 2006, when starting NewAssignment. Net, that the pest editorial combinations will be pro-am. I still think that. Why Because for most reporters covering a big sprawling beat, it’s still true what Dan Gillmor said. ’My readers know more than I do.’ And it’s still the case that tapping into that knowledge is becoming more practical because of the Internet."
J. D. Lasica, a social-media strategist and former editor, also says he sees no departure from the "wisdom of the crowds" model. "I’ve seen very little evidence that the sweeping cultural shifts we’ve seen in the past half dozen years show any signs of retreating," Mr. Lasica says. "Young people now rely on social networks...to take cues from their friends on which movies to see, books to read... And didn’t ’Lonely Planet Guide’ explore this terrain for travel and Zagat’s for dining back in the ’90s"
In many cases, traditional media is still the first choice of online users because the reporters and editors of these media outlets have created a level of trust for many people— but not for everyone. When you combine the idea of expertise with the idea of choice, you discover nontraditional information sites that become some of the Internet’s most trusted places. Take SCOTUSblog. com, written by lawyers about cases in the Supreme Court. It has become the place to go for other lawyers, reporters, and editors to find in-depth information about important cases. The Internet also allows individuals to achieve this level of trust. For instance, the Scobleizer. corn blog written by Robert Scoble. Mr. Scoble, a former Microsoft employee and tech expert, is widely seen as one of the most important people to read when you want to learn what’s happening in the world of technology. He built his large audience on the fact that people trust his writing.
To me, it’s the best of all possible information worlds.

The author introduces the Newsweek article Revenge of the Expert ______.

A.as a starting point for his argument and discussion

B.to show it has won the support of Jay Rosen, J.D. Lasica, Dan Gillmor and many others

C.as an example to indicate the end of "real journalism"

D.to prove that the future of digital information will be based more on expertise.

题型:填空题

1924年7月5日在南京成立的()是旧中国唯一正式的(),代表中国参加各类国际体育事务和活动,为开展和推动近代体育事业发挥了积极作用。