首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
The Prize: $10 Million A They are an elite club of billionaires, movie producers, dotcom wiz kids and the occasional astronaut
The Prize: $10 Million A They are an elite club of billionaires, movie producers, dotcom wiz kids and the occasional astronaut
admin
2011-01-14
32
问题
The Prize: $10 Million
A They are an elite club of billionaires, movie producers, dotcom wiz kids and the occasional astronaut and between them they hope to change the face of scientific research with money and influence, the 20-strong team—among them the producer of the Blues Brothers and Naked Gun movies, the cofounder of Google, a former White House aide and the Vietnam veteran-turned-billionaire genetics entrepreneur, Craig Venter, are to launch a series of multimillion dollar prizes to accelerate scientific breakthroughs that otherwise might be decades away.
B Together, they make up the X-Prize Foundation, an organisation set up by Peter Diamandis of Space Adventures, the company that arranged for Dennis Tito to fly to the International Space Station in 2001 and so become the world’s first space tourist. The foundation (motto: "Creating radical breakthroughs for the benefit of humanity"), plans to launch three prizes of at least $10 million this year to crack some of the toughest problems facing genetics, nanotechnology and the car industry. "Our goal is to build ourselves into a world-class prize institute and focus on using those prizes to attack some of the grand challenges of our time," Dr Diamandis said. "By setting up prizes with a big enough purse, you can reach across space and time and problems will get solved."
C The move follows the foundation’s huge success with the Ansari X-Prize, which promised $I0 million for the first commercial manned spacecraft to reach suborbital space twice within two weeks. Named after Anousheh Ansari, a dotcom multimillionaire and one of only two women on the foundation’s board, the prize attracted 26 teams which spent more than $100 million trying to win. The prize was triggered by what Dr Diamandis calls his "absolute frustration at the glacial pace of progress" and was won in 2004 by Burt Rutan, an American aeronautics expert, with his rocket-plane SpaceShipOne. The competition forced US officials to draw up regulations for commercial spaceflight and paved the way for Richard Branson to add space tourism to his portfolio with the launch of Virgin Galactic, a spaceflight venture that will use a rocket designed by Mr Rutan.
D Now the foundation is looking to repeat its success in other areas of science. Dr Diamandis is cagey about the finer details of future prizes, but one will offer $10 million for the first company to sequence the genetic code of 100 people in a matter of weeks. The prize is intended to force private industry to find ways of making full genome sequencing cheap enough for everyone to afford. It will be no cakewalk: a full genome sequence now takes around six months to read and costs $20 million. "The value of having the human genome doesn’t really occur until you have it for tens or hundreds of thousands of people, so the prize will make that happen," Dr Diamandis said. "To say this gene correlates with adult onset diabetes, that this gene reacts badly with that drug, you need a huge statistical database."
E A second prize is aimed at kicking America’s self-proclaimed addiction to oil, by spurring research into greener vehicles. "This is a hot button that can effect our reliance on energy from around the world and our production of pollution, which are major problems from a national security standpoint and an environmental standpoint,’ Dr Diamandis said. "We’re still using the internal combustion engine after 100 years, and getting 20 miles per gallon for the past 40 years. It’s ripe for a major prize to break things open." The foundation is also planning prizes in nanotechnology and education and is considering a second space prize, which could see the first commercial team to put a person into orbital spaceflight win $50 million to $100 million. "We’re always looking for where things have become stuck, where there are bureaucratic, technology, government or industrial problems stopping things evolving." According to Dr Diamandis, in the future such prizes will shape research by focusing minds on a particular problem and ensuring the goalposts do not change with political whims. Soon, he believes $100 million and even $1 billion prizes will be put up by organisations keen to draw on the mass intelligence of the world’s experts.
F The money for the prizes comes from donations from wealthy individuals and sponsorship, and entry is usually open to all. "In general we want these open to the most brilliant minds on the planet," Dr Diamandis said. "A lot of the value is not just the cash, it’s the heroism that goes along with winning the competition. It’s what drives people to work around the clock and take risk to levels required for breakthroughs." The X-Prize Foundation has inspired others to follow suit, notably Nasa, which believes its money might be better spent setting up a prize fund than running parallel research projects in-house. This month it released details of six $5 million "challenges" to solve technical hurdles standing in the way of typically Nasaish projects, namely how to build extraterrestrial fuel depots, human lunar all-terrain vehicles, low-cost space pressure suits, lunar night power sources, micro reentry vehicles and "station-keeping solar sails".
*
选项
答案
假
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/vdVO777K
本试题收录于:
雅思阅读题库雅思(IELTS)分类
0
雅思阅读
雅思(IELTS)
相关试题推荐
OnewaytosolvethisproblemistolookfortheLowestCommonDenominator(LCD).Thesmallestnumberthatboth4and8dividee
Thisproblemrequiresyoutofindasquarerootofanumberaswellasanumbersquared.Thesquarerootof64is8(64iscalle
Thefigureaboverepresentsarectangulargardenwithawalkwayaroundit.Thegardenis18feetlongand12feetwide.Thewalk
Aisha’sincomein2004was20percentgreaterthanherincomein200WhatistheratioofAisha’sincomein2004toherincomein
DInthisquestion,youareaskedtocompare2xwith3x+1,giventhatxisanegativeinteger.Onewaytoapproachthisproblemi
Themostcompellingevidenceoftherisksofcarcinogeniceffectsofenvironmentalpollutantscomesfromanimaldata,suc
Themostcompellingevidenceoftherisksofcarcinogeniceffectsofenvironmentalpollutantscomesfromanimaldata,suc
Muchofcomputerscienceworkdoesnotinvolvethesudden______ofnewlanguagesbutthemethodical______ofolderones.
AstheworksofdozensofwomenwritershavebeenrescuedfromwhatE.P.Thompsoncalls"theenormouscondescensiono
Whenfactsare______anddatahardtocomeby,evenscientistsoccasionallythrowasidetheprofessionalpretenseof______and
随机试题
对既往有高热惊厥史的患儿,预防高热惊厥发作的护理措施以下哪项正确:
回弹仪在每次使用前应该进行()。
“备案号”栏应填写()。“随附单据”栏应填写()。
下列情形中,属于履行出资人职责的机构和履行出资人职责的企业应当办理占有产权登记的情形的有()。
食物蛋白质的氨基酸组成与参考蛋白质比较,缺乏较多的氨基酸,称为限制氨基酸。()
某公司设计了一个图案,向商标局申请注册,商标局经审核后向其颁发了商标专用权证。商标局的这一行为属于()。
下列哪一选项所描写的城市不是当前的省会城市?
如今社会上的骗子骗术不断升级,为了这些行骗的手段他们可谓是_________,花样百出,使得老百姓_________。因此,为提高大家的防范意识和增强辨别能力,政府广开宣传渠道是_________的大事。填入画横线部分最恰当的一项是(
【S1】【S6】
TheWorldHealthOrganizationsayspeopleneedmoreinformationabouthowto【B1】______usetraditionalmedicines.TheW.H.O.now
最新回复
(
0
)