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  • Rob: Hello I'm Rob and this is 6 Minute English -

  • a programme that brings you an interesting topic,

  • authentic listening practice and some vocabulary

  • to help you improve your language skills.

  • Joining me today is Neil.

  • Neil: Hello. And today we're discussing those pilotless

  • aircraft that we seem to be hearing

  • and reading a lot about at the moment.

  • Rob: You mean drones. And yes, they are in the news

  • quite often for good and bad reasons.

  • They've been used for many things from smuggling

  • drugs, detecting water leaks and surveillance.

  • Neil: And surveillance - that means 'the act

  • of carefully watching someone or something' -

  • perhaps a criminal - but also it means spying,

  • maybe on me and you Rob?

  • So should we be welcoming

  • the rise of the use of drones?

  • Rob: Well, before our discussion about that 'takes off',

  • we need to set today's question for you to answer, Neil.

  • Neil: What are you droning on about Rob?

  • And by that I don't mean 'flying a drone' -

  • I mean 'talking too much in a very boring way'!

  • Rob: Thanks Neil. Now just answer this, will you?

  • Drones are sometimes also referred to

  • as UAVs. So, what does UAV stand for? Is it...

  • a) Unidentified aerial vehicle,

  • b) Unmanned aerial vehicle

  • or c) Unaided aircraft vehicle

  • Neil: Well, I'm going to go for b)

  • unmanned aerial vehicle.

  • Rob: Ok well, we'll see if you're right later on.

  • Now let's talk more about drones,

  • which, apparently, seem to be everywhere now.

  • Neil: But are they safe and are they necessary?

  • I've heard about them being a hazard to aircraft

  • because they've been flown close to airports.

  • Rob: Well, figures in 2016 showed that in the UK

  • there were 70 near misses involving drones.

  • And that's more than double the year before.

  • So that is a little worrying.

  • Neil: Yes. And there's the potential risk

  • of people's privacy being invaded when a drone

  • is flown over their property with a camera attached to it.

  • Rob: Ah, but those cameras are also good at capturing

  • some great aerial footage - that's the film

  • recording of the view from the above the ground.

  • So they're not all bad. And Dr Yoge Patel would agree.

  • She is CEO of Blue Bear,

  • which supplies unmanned planes and drones.

  • Here she is speaking about drones on the BBC's

  • Woman's Hour programme...

  • Dr Yoge Patel: They have the potential

  • to be dangerous, agreed. They also have though,

  • on the flip side, the ability to be a game changer

  • in both domestic use and in military use.

  • So, some of our drones are being used

  • for aircraft inspections. We've put our drones

  • into Fukishima.

  • Rob: So there you go Neil. There are many useful things

  • drones can do, and Dr Patel said

  • they have the ability to be a game changer.

  • Neil: And by that you mean 'something that

  • completely changes the way something is done

  • or thought about'.

  • Rob: Yes. Her company has used drones to inspect

  • the inside of the damaged Fukishima nuclear

  • power station in Japan.

  • And another example of drones being a game changer

  • is UNICEF and the Malawian government testing drones

  • for carrying medical supplies.

  • This could help save lives in remote places.

  • Neil: And I have read that in Australia,

  • lifeguards are using drones to help rescue

  • swimmers who get in trouble in the sea.

  • Rob: And have you heard about a Japanese firm

  • that's planning to use a drone to force employees

  • out of their offices by playing music at them

  • if they stay to work evening overtime.

  • Neil: I haven't, but you've convinced me -

  • it seems like the sky's the limit

  • for the uses of drones!

  • I mean there's no limit to what they can do.

  • But I am a little concerned

  • about how they are regulated or controlled.

  • Rob: Well Dr Yoge Patel says because the technology

  • is new, regulations - or legal controls -

  • are developing all the time...

  • Dr Yoge Patel: As technology progresses, regulation

  • and operational use needs to then be harmonised

  • with it. And we are, as a community, going through

  • that whole process of saying what is

  • proportionate and appropriate regulation

  • to go with different uses of drones.

  • Neil: So she talked about regulations being

  • harmonised as technology progresses.

  • Rob: So I think she means 'making regulations suitable

  • and appropriate for what the drones

  • are being used for'. So they need some control,

  • but not so they can't be useful and effective.

  • Neil: Like flying drones to stop you working late!

  • Now Rob, I'm dying to know

  • what the other name for a drone is.

  • Rob: OK, let me tell you. So earlier I asked you

  • what does UAV stand for? Was it...

  • a) Unidentified aerial vehicle

  • b) Unmanned aerial vehicle

  • or c) Unaided aircraft vehicle

  • Neil: And I said b) - was that correct?

  • Rob: Yes Neil, you know your drones - that's correct.

  • Well done. UAVs or drones have been around

  • for quite a while in different forms.

  • It's thought they were first used for providing

  • practice targets for training military personnel.

  • OK Neil, let's quickly go over some of the

  • vocabulary we have mentioned today,

  • starting with surveillance.

  • Neil: "The police kept the jewellery shop

  • under surveillance because they had a tip-off

  • about a robbery." So that means 'carefully

  • watching someone or something,

  • usually to try to stop something illegal'.

  • Rob: Then we mentioned aerial footage -

  • that's film recording made from the sky.

  • "The aerial footage on TV of the dolphins swimming

  • was spectacular."

  • Neil: Yes, drones have been a game changer

  • for wildlife programmes on TV. That means

  • 'something that completely changes the way

  • something is done or thought about'.

  • Rob: We also mentioned the phrase 'the sky's the limit',

  • meaning 'there's no limit to something'.

  • "The sky is the limit to what professional

  • footballers can earn these days."

  • Neil: Then we discussed harmonised -

  • that describes two things being suitable for each other

  • to allow them to work properly.

  • "The garden has been designed to harmonise

  • with the natural landscape."

  • Rob: Very useful vocabulary, Neil.

  • But let's stop droning on - and that means

  • 'talking too much in a boring way' - and remind everyone

  • to check out our You Tube, Facebook, Twitter

  • and Instagram pages - and of course, our website

  • at bbclearningenglish.com. See you next time.

  • Goodbye.

  • Neil: Goodbye

Rob: Hello I'm Rob and this is 6 Minute English -

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6分鐘學會談無人機的新用途! (Learn to talk about new uses for drones in 6 minutes!)

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    Samuel 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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