首页
登录
职称英语
How far can Amazon go?A)WHEN Jeff Bezos left his job in
How far can Amazon go?A)WHEN Jeff Bezos left his job in
游客
2023-07-02
13
管理
问题
How far can Amazon go?
A)WHEN Jeff Bezos left his job in finance and moved to Seattle 20 years ago to start a new firm, he rented a house with a garage, as that was where the likes of Apple and HP had been born. Although he started selling books, he called the firm Amazon because a giant river reflected the scale of his ambitions. This week the world’s leading e-commerce company unveiled its first smartphone, which Amazon treats less as a communication device than an ingenious shopping platform and a way of gathering data about people in order to make even more accurate product recommendations.
B)The smartphone is typical of Amazon. There is the remorseless expansion: if you can deliver books and washing machines, why not a phone? There is the ability to switch between the real world of atoms and the digital world of bits: Amazon has one of the world’s most impressive physical distribution systems, even as it has branched out into cloud computing, e-books, video streaming and music downloads(see article). There is the drive for market share over immediate profits. And there is the slightly creepy feeling that Amazon knows too much about its users already. So far its insatiable appetite has helped consumers: but as it grows in size and power the danger is that it will go too far.
C)Customers who bought this item also bought...
For the moment, admiration should count for more than fear. Many things the world now takes for granted were introduced by Mr. Bezos. Typing your credit-card number into a web browser was once considered a sign of insanity until Amazon showed how easy and safe buying things online could be. Once people had bought a book, they tried other things. Today the global e-commerce market is worth $1.5 trillion.
D)Amazon also fostered the emergence of customer reviews. From the start it let buyers rate and review books. This still irks some professional critics, and some of the most fulsome five-star ratings may be from spouses of authors. But overall they provide valuable advice to buyers. Today everything from apps to hotels to hoses can be rated online, and retail websites seem incomplete without customer reviews.
E)Then there are the industries it has upended. Books came first. Amazon has changed publishing twice— first by making any book in the world quickly available and then by making e-books mainstream. Before Amazon launched the Kindle in 2007, e-readers were fiddly gadgets that few people used. The Kindle was easy to use, worked anywhere and allowed instant delivery straight to the device(rather than via a PC). Amazon also pioneered a new model for cloud computing. In 2006 it began renting out computer capacity by the hour. The option to rent rather than buy computing power greatly reduced the cost and complexity of launching a new company. Amazon’s cloud services have since been used by startups including Netflix, Instagram, Pinterest, Spotify and Airbnb, and have spawned a whole new industry.
F)Apple may be better known as an innovator, but Amazon may have had just as big an impact on the workings of the digital world. And it keeps on experimenting. Unconstrained by a self-image as a company that does a particular thing, Amazon has dabbled in areas from Internet search to robotics to film and television development.
G)Indeed,if your glasses are particularly rose-tinted, Amazon seems to have put the "long term" back into Anglo-Saxon capitalism. At a time when Wall Street is obsessed by quarterly results and share buy-backs , Amazon has made it clear to shareholders that, given a choice between making a profit and investing in new areas, it will always choose the latter. While other technology giants sit on record piles of cash, Amazon still has plenty of ideas about where to invest and innovate. And investors seem happy with it: Amazon’s price-to-earnings ratio has exceeded 3 ,500 at times. It aligns top executives’ interests with those of shareholders by paying them largely in stock: its highest salary is $ 175,000 a year.
H)Giant selection, tiny tax bill
The problem is that many of these virtues come with accompanying vices. Amazon stands accused of unfair competition—of being a lousy employer, dodging tax and bullying its rivals. Amazon says median pay in its American warehouses is 30% higher than in large retail stores. On tax, the picture is a little more nuanced. The main reason its tax bill is so low is that it does not make profits, but Amazon has also been extremely aggressive in(legally)booking profits to low-tax countries. Having campaigned against sales taxes for online transactions for many years, it has lately changed its tune, and now collects sales taxes in a growing number of American states.
I)As for bullying competitors, most of this is just the savage magic of capitalism. Amazon has crushed local bookshops but only in the same way that Tesco and Wal-Mart crushed grocers—by providing a cheaper, easier way to shop. However antitrust regulators must ensure it is not abusing its market power, on a case-by-case basis. For instance, Amazon’s current dispute with Hachette, a large publisher, may largely be a standard tussle between retailer and supplier. But when the dominant seller of e-books removes pre-order buttons and makes delivery times longer for Hachette books, that hardly squares with Mr. Bezos’s professed emphasis on customer service.
J)Perhaps the biggest concern about Amazon is, paradoxically, a consequence of its long-term vision. It is hard to compete with a company whose shareholders do not expect it to make a profit. Its vast scale and willingness to operate at zero or negative margins represent high barriers to entry for potential competitors. This cannot go on for ever. The concern is that Amazon is merely waiting for rivals to go out of business before raising its prices. If that happens, regulators should jump on it hard. That would provide an opportunity for another firm—China’s Alibaba, say—and some investors might rue the Amazon earnings that never came. But consumers would once again win, as indeed they generally have done as Mr. Bezos’s scrappy startup has expanded its reach into so many aspects of everyday life. [br] On-line credit card paying was once considered too dangerous to be put in use.
选项
答案
C
解析
定位句提到“在浏览器中输入信用卡号码曾经被视为是疯狂的行为,直到亚马逊证明了在网上购物有多便捷安全。”由此可知信用卡在线交易一度被认为太危险了。题干中的dangerous是对论述中的sign of insanity的转述。因此选项C)是正确的。
转载请注明原文地址:https://www.tihaiku.com/zcyy/2800907.html
相关试题推荐
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
TheEndoftheBook?A)Amazon,byfarthelargestbookse
随机试题
[originaltext]Risinglevelsofobesityandunhealthyweightscouldbelinke
层次模型可以表示多对多的联系。
当风机供给的风量不能符合要求时,可以采取的方法是()。A.减少或增加管网系统
下列关于别名和自联接的说法中,正确的是A.SQL语句中允许在WHERE短语中为关
以下关于无效宣告请求审查原则及法定理由的说法,错误的是()。A.在无效宣
以下对证券市场监管意义的描述错误的是()A.加强证券市场监管是保障广大发行人合
一般来说,有利于增加所在地区房地产市场需求的因素有( )。A.城市化水平的提高
根据震情和震害预测结果,国务院地震行政主管部门和()负责管理地震工作的部门
会计工作是一项严肃细致的工作。因此,爱岗敬业要求()。A、树立职业荣誉感 B、
当施工单位发生进度拖延且又未按监理工程师的指令改变延期状态时,监理工程师可以采取
最新回复
(
0
)