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EXPLORATIONS1 – December 18, 2002: Shopping on the Internet
By Paul Thompson
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
This is Mary Tillotson.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Steve Ember with the VOA Special English program EXPLORATIONS. It is the holiday gift-giving
season in the United2 States. More and more people are using their computers and the Internet to buy their holiday
gifts. Today we tell how the computer and the Internet are changing the way people buy products.
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
In nineteen-ninety-five, a small company began selling books from its headquarters3
in the western city of Seattle, Washington4. It was an unusual company. It did not
have a store you could visit. The only way you could buy a book from the company
was to use a computer linked with the Internet.
The name of the company is Amazon-dot-com. It was one of the first businesses to offer products for sale using
the Internet. The company made it easy to buy almost any book you wanted. You used your computer to link
with the company so you could read about many different books. When you found the book you wanted, you
placed an order and typed the number of your credit5 card to pay for it. A worker at the Amazon Company placed
the book in a box and usually mailed it to you the next day. It was really very simple.
VOICE TWO:
Buying products using a computer and the Internet seemed very unusual in nineteen-ninety-five. At first, many
people did not think is was safe to type their credit card information on the Internet. However, buying a book
from Amazon.com was very easy. For many people, buying a book from Amazon.com was their first attempt at
buying anything on the Internet.
Today, Amazon.com sells books to millions of people in more than two-hundred-twenty countries. It is one of the
most successful companies linked to the Internet. And, Amazon no longer sells just books. It sells toys, music,
games, electronic6 equipment, and even computers.
Because of Amazon.com’s success, many other companies began selling products with the aid of a computer
linked to the Internet. Some of the first were other book companies, like Barnes and Noble7. Today, thousands of
large and small companies offer their products on the Internet. Buyers use their computers to order and pay for
products. The company sends the products to the buyers. A few companies offer many more things on their Web8
sites than in their stores. For example, Barnes and Noble offers more than one-million books, far more than in
any one store.
VOICE ONE:
Business experts say buying products using the Internet is becoming increasingly9 popular. They say buying on
the Internet has increased as much as thirty-six percent over last year. Experts say people spent almost ten-
thousand-million dollars buying products on the Internet during the first nine months of this year.
Buyers are expected to spend almost fourteen-thousand-million dollars more during the last three months of this
year. This large increase in buying is because of the holiday gift-giving season. The holiday buying season in the
United States usually begins the day after Thanksgiving, the fourth Thursday in November. It continues until
Christmas Day, December twenty-fifth.
VOICE TWO:
Many stores in the United States depend on the holiday season for as much as fifty percent of their yearly10 profits.
A poor holiday season for a store can cause serious financial problems. Many businesses quickly learned11 they
could increase their holiday sales by offering12 their products on the Internet.
Buying products with the aid of a computer is a quickly expanding sales idea. However, the idea of buying a
product without ever visiting the store is not new. Only the method of buying has changed. This method of
business has a very old name. It is called “mail order.
”
VOICE ONE:
In eighteen-eighty-six, a young man named Richard Sears bought several watches. Mister13 Sears worked for the
Minneapolis and Saint14 Louis Railroad15 Company. He sold the watches to other railroad workers. He soon hired a
young watchmaker named Alvah Roebuck to make more watches. The Sears and Roebuck Watch Company soon
settled16 in Chicago, Illinois.
Mister Sears and Mister Roebuck knew that the majority of Americans lived on farms. They did not live close to
stores where they could buy the products they needed.
The Sears and Roebuck Watch Company soon began offering many other products that could be bought from
their Chicago store. The Sears and Roebuck company could offer products for much less money than local stores.
VOICE TWO:
In eighteen-ninety-five, the Sears and Roebuck Company began printing a book that listed the products the
company sold. The book had five-hundred-thirty-two pages.
This kind of book is called a catalog17. The Sears and Roebuck Catalog offered for sale almost every kind of
equipment a farmer might need. It also offered clothing and shoes for men, women and children. It offered
stoves, tables, chairs, glassware and bicycles. People could buy firearms, rings, watches, toys and many, many
other products. The huge catalog had pictures of the products and told how to order and pay for the products. The
Sears, Roebuck and Company Catalog was really the sales computer of its day.
VOICE ONE:
Perhaps the most unusual product ever sold by the Sears and Roebuck Company was a house. From nineteen-oheight until nineteen-forty, the Sears and Roebuck Company offered several different sized houses that could be
ordered through the catalog. Each house arrived at the nearest railroad station. It came with everything needed to
build the house -- more than thirty-thousand parts.
This included wood, paint, nails18 electric wire, pipes for water and a seventy-five page book. The book told how
to build the house. Sears, Roebuck and Company sold more than seventy-five-thousand of these built-it-yourself
homes.
Other companies also sold this kind of house. Perhaps the most famous of these houses is the one in California19
where former President Richard Nixon was born. That house is now part of the President Richard Nixon Library
at Yorba Linda, California.
VOICE TWO:
The Sears company still prints several different catalogs20. People can read about a product in the catalog and buy
it by calling Sears on the telephone. They can also link with the company on the Internet and buy the product.
Shoppers can pay extra money to have the product sent to their home, or they can pick it up at one of the many
Sears stores.
The story of the Sears Company is not different from many other companies. Large companies like Sears and
even very small companies now use the Internet as a business tool.
VOICE ONE:
Experts who study the business use of the Internet say people buy more items21 for their home than any other
product. This includes tables, chairs, lights, paintings, and rugs22. The experts say the Internet sales of these things
have increased one-hundred-forty-six percent over last year.
People ordered sixty-six percent more clothing than last year, thirty-one percent more books and twenty-five
percent more electronic devices23.
A huge winter storm affected24 much of the Eastern United States at the beginning of this month. One business
report said the storm might have caused even more people to buy holiday gifts using their computers. The report
said it was easier for people to buy products from their nice warm homes than to travel to a store in the middle of
a snow or ice storm.
VOICE TWO:
In nineteen-ninety-five when Amazon.com began selling books, few items were for sale on the Internet. That has
changed greatly. Now you can buy almost anything you want. There are even companies that help private
individuals sell items on the Internet. Recently a man in Santa Rosa, California, offered a Russian-built jet25 fighter
warplane for sale.
The plane had once belonged to the Air Force of Poland. The man said he wanted at least twenty-five-thousand
dollars for the aircraft26. But he said the plane needed to be repaired before it could fly. And he said it no longer
had its machine guns!
(THEME)
VOICE ONE:
This Special English program was written and produced by Paul Thompson. This is Mary Tillotson.
VOICE TWO:
And this is Steve Ember. Join us again next week for another EXPLORATIONS program on the Voice of
America.
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1 explorations | |
探险旅行( exploration的名词复数 ); 搜寻; 考察; 勘探 | |
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2 united | |
adj.和谐的;团结的;联合的,统一的 | |
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3 headquarters | |
n.司令部,指挥部;总部,总店 | |
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4 Washington | |
n.华盛顿特区(是美国首都) | |
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5 credit | |
n.信用,荣誉,贷款,学分;v.归功于,赞颂,信任 | |
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6 electronic | |
adj.电子的;n.[-s]电子学,电子设备 | |
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7 noble | |
n.贵族;adj.高贵的,高尚的,贵族的,辉煌的 | |
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8 web | |
n.网,蛛丝,蹼,织物,圈套,卷筒纸;vi.生蹼,形成网;vt.织蜘蛛网于,使落入圈套 | |
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9 increasingly | |
adv.逐渐地,日益地,逐渐增加地 | |
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10 yearly | |
adj.每年的,一年一度的;adv.一年一次地 | |
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11 learned | |
adj.有学问的,博学的;learn的过去式和过去分词 | |
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12 offering | |
n.提供,奉献物,牲礼 | |
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13 mister | |
n.(略作Mr.全称很少用于书面)先生 | |
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14 saint | |
n.圣徒;基督教徒;vt.成为圣徒,把...视为圣徒 | |
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15 railroad | |
n.铁路;vi.由铁路运输 | |
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16 settled | |
a.固定的;稳定的 | |
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17 catalog | |
n.目录(册)vt.将…编入目录,将…编目 | |
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18 nails | |
n.钉子( nail的名词复数 );钉状物;指甲;趾甲v.钉住( nail的第三人称单数 );抓住;证明…不属实;揭露 | |
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19 California | |
n.加利福尼亚(美国) | |
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20 catalogs | |
目录,目录册,目录簿( catalog的名词复数 ); [美]大学概况一览; 登记,记载 | |
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21 items | |
n.物料项目 (任何一种自制或采购的零部件或组装件,如最终产品、部件、子部件、零件或原材料);条( item的名词复数 );一项;一则;一件商品(或物品) | |
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22 rugs | |
n.小块地毯( rug的名词复数 ) | |
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23 devices | |
n.设备;装置( device的名词复数 );花招;(为实现某种目的的)计划;手段 | |
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24 affected | |
adj.不自然的,假装的 | |
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25 jet | |
n.喷气发动机,喷气式飞机;v.喷出,喷射 | |
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26 aircraft | |
n.飞机 (单复数同) | |
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