본문 바로가기

2___CNN10 지문/Script 001-040 (2109-2112)

[CSP 대본 012-016] 건물 냉각, 중국 게임 제한, 탈레반 집권

[CSP 대본 012-016] 건물 냉각, 중국 게임 제한, 탈레반 집권

012-016


012_건물 냉각 1부_211206_211020_New Type of Cooling System for Buildings - Part 1
013_건물 냉각 2부_211207_211025_New Type of Cooling System for Buildings - Part 2
014_중국 게임 제한_211213_211027_China Limits Online Gaming for Minors
015_탈레반 집권 1부_221220_211101_Daily Life under the Taliban - Part 1
016_탈레반 집권 2부_221221_211103_Daily Life under the Taliban - Part 2

 

 

 

012_건물 냉각 1부_211206_211020_New Type of Cooling System for Buildings - Part 1


YBM CNN 10
(211020) New Type of Cooling System for Buildings - Part 1
새로운 형태의 건물 냉각 시스템 - 1부
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2200

 

CNN - YBMNET

평일 매일 업로드되는 5가지 주제(비즈니스, 연예, 스포츠, 세계, 미국)의 CNN뉴스 영상과 기사에서 현지 아나운서의 정확한 발음과 완성도 높은 문장을 통해 영어 듣기, 읽기, 말하기, 쓰기를 학

cnn.ybmnet.co.kr

 

CNN 10

(210831 / 04:48) Rescues And Recoveries | August 31, 2021
https://youtu.be/ajcPaw1hsEU

 

Transcript

RACHEL CRANE (CNN CORRESPONDENT): Air conditioning accounts for 10 percent of all global electricity consumption and the demand for this type of cooling is expected to triple by 2050, which could strain already overworked electric grids.

ELI GOLDSTEIN (CEO OF SKYCOOL): As it gets hotter, air conditioners, refrigeration systems need more energy to run. The more electricity we use for cooling, the more challenging it is to operate and provide electricity reliably.

RACHEL CRANE: That’s why it’s the company SkyCool’s mission to make existing cooling systems run more efficiently by taking advantage of a phenomenon that exists in nature.
All objects give off heat in the form of invisible infrared radiation. As heat leaves an object, it becomes cooler a process known as radiative cooling. But some objects can actually become colder than the air surrounding it. It’s part of a reason frost forms on grass even if the air temperature is above freezing, but this only happens at night. Once the sun rises, the grass eventually warms back up. So SkyKool designed a new material with radiative cooling properties that work 24 hours a day.

ELI GOLDSTEIN: The radiative cooling... in the sense that we’re doing has really never been out there before. The effect is never observed during the day, and by enabling it with these films that we’ve developed you can now use this type of cooling even when it's under direct sunlight.

RACHEL CRANE: Developed using modern nanotechnology, the film has hundreds of tiny optical layers designed to emit the specific wavelength of radiation that maximizes cooling. But it’s also highly reflective, absorbing little energy so it stays cool even under the sun.

ELI GOLDSTEIN: That combination of properties has never been found in nature.

 


013_건물 냉각 2부_211207_211025_New Type of Cooling System for Buildings - Part 2

 

YBM CNN 10
(211025) New Type of Cooling System for Buildings - Part 2
새로운 형태의 건물 냉각 시스템 - 2부
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2201

 

CNN - YBMNET

평일 매일 업로드되는 5가지 주제(비즈니스, 연예, 스포츠, 세계, 미국)의 CNN뉴스 영상과 기사에서 현지 아나운서의 정확한 발음과 완성도 높은 문장을 통해 영어 듣기, 읽기, 말하기, 쓰기를 학

cnn.ybmnet.co.kr

 

CNN 10

(210831 / 06:27) Rescues And Recoveries | August 31, 2021
https://youtu.be/ajcPaw1hsEU

 

 

Transcript

RACHEL CRANE (CNN CORRESPONDENT): They’re incredibly reflective, like I’m... they’re almost blinding. Are they, are they actually physically cool to the touch?

ELI GOLDSTEIN, CEO OF SKYCOOL: Yeah.

RACHEL CRANE: Can I, can I touch them? Are they gonna -- blind and burn myself at the same time.

ELI GOLDSTEIN: Yeah…

RACHEL CRANE: Oh wow. Yeah.

ELI GOLDSTEIN: ...any other surface on the roof, it will be much cooler.

RACHEL CRANE: Yeah, they’re much cooler than what I would expect. I mean, it’s hot, it’s a hot day and that’s cool to the touch.

ELI GOLDSTEIN: Yeah, yeah. This is an infrared image of the panels on our roof. You can see there’s just a really stark contrast in, in temperature between the surfaces that are -- these radiative cooling [INAUDIBLE] and the roof of the building.

RACHEL CRANE: And what is that temperature difference?

ELI GOLDSTEIN: It’s gonna be on the order of 40 Fahrenheit, it looks like.

RACHEL CRANE: And because the panels don’t need any electricity to get cold, SkyCool says they can help a building’s cooling system operate with less power. Here’s how. First, the panels cool down water running through pipes embedded behind them. Then, that cold water flows into the refrigeration or air conditioning system to help chill refrigerant liquid. That takes some of the workload off the condenser. The less the condenser runs, the more money is saved in the energy bill.

JESUS VALENZUELA (MANAGER, GROCERY OUTLET): Anything that we can do to take some of, of the load off of the power grids, I’m all for it.

RACHEL CRANE: In 2019, SkyCool installed this panel at this grocery store in Stockton, California, where it’s hot and dry most of the year. The store says it saw a notable difference.

JESUS VALENZUELA: After we had our SkyCool system installed, our electricity company increased their rates on us. We actually didn’t see our bill go up at all. In fact, we saw it go just a little bit down. We’ve saved on average about $3,000 a month.


014_중국 게임 제한_211213_211027_China Limits Online Gaming for Minors


YBM CNN 10
(211027) China Limits Online Gaming for Minors
중국, 청소년의 온라인 게임 시간 제한해
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2202

 

CNN - YBMNET

평일 매일 업로드되는 5가지 주제(비즈니스, 연예, 스포츠, 세계, 미국)의 CNN뉴스 영상과 기사에서 현지 아나운서의 정확한 발음과 완성도 높은 문장을 통해 영어 듣기, 읽기, 말하기, 쓰기를 학

cnn.ybmnet.co.kr

 

오디오 파일 링크

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1WR_DtDBNcfqcW91AaaDlko_XBteUDJnD/view?usp=sharing 

 

014_중국 게임 제한_211027YBMCNN10.mp3

 

drive.google.com


Transcript

STEVEN JIANG (CNN CORRESPONDENT): Now this is not even the Chinese government’s first attempt to limit playtime for minors. Back in 2019, they already limited playtime for people under 18 to 90 minutes each day and three hours at most during public holidays.

They have also long required real name registration and log-in for all video games, but all of these restrictions apparently not enough according to officials. Because they have received so many complaints from parents who say gaming addiction has severely affected their children’s ability to learn, to study, their mental and physical health, as well as causing social problems.

So the authorities trying to frame their latest decision as addressing people’s concerns and protecting children’s welfare. Now the enforcement is mostly gonna be carried out by gaming companies which have pledged to strictly follow the latest regulations, but they also added that minors account for only a very small portion of their user base as well as revenues.

There are, of course, plenty of supportive and even cheering voices online with parents. Some even outside of China applauding this decision as a move long overdue, but this kind of nanny state approach, of course, is very much controversial.

South Korea, for example, is in the process of abolishing gaming curfew for teenagers because the lack of effectiveness. And some people also say this latest move is another example of the ruling Communist Party here trying to reinsert itself into every aspect of people’s private life for political and ideological reasons especially for the younger generation.

Just in the past few weeks the government here has banned after school private tutoring and they’re also cracking down on so-called celebrity worshiping culture among the young people, and now, of course, these gaming restrictions. So, leaving some people asking sarcastically what are young Chinese people now supposed to do during their spare time? Steven Jiang, CNN, Beijing.

 


015_탈레반 집권 1부_221220_211101_Daily Life under the Taliban - Part 1


YBM CNN 10
(211101) Daily Life under the Taliban - Part 1
탈레반 집권 하의 일상적인 삶 - 1부
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2223

 

CNN - YBMNET

평일 매일 업로드되는 5가지 주제(비즈니스, 연예, 스포츠, 세계, 미국)의 CNN뉴스 영상과 기사에서 현지 아나운서의 정확한 발음과 완성도 높은 문장을 통해 영어 듣기, 읽기, 말하기, 쓰기를 학

cnn.ybmnet.co.kr

CNN 10
(210824 / 01:54) Daily Life, Economics, And A Very Fast Build | September 7, 2021
https://youtu.be/OzGtYeDgLgc

 


Transcript

REPORTER: Inside the new Afghanistan, in rural Paktika Province far from Kabul, the Taliban provincial governor has called a meeting. No women to be seen. Local village elders and tribal chiefs listen. A young boy takes a selfie. Much has changed since the Taliban were last in charge. Smartphones and social media, but poverty still the country’s biggest problem.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (TRANSLATED): We have many expectations and we are praying the Taliban will deliver.

REPORTER: The week after Kabul fell, a local journalist took a road trip for us to see what was happening outside the capital. Taliban guides showed him the way, but the border change is already underway. Part charm offensive, giving traders what they want, longer opening hours at the border and part crackdown keeping men and women apart.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (TRANSLATED): Let me tell you. Before we had one single line, for both men and women. Now we have two. They are kept apart.

REPORTER: Pakistani officials easing into the new relationship backing the segregation. On this journey, two things become clear. Afghanistan’s near financial collapse and a hard switch to religious rule. Spotting a crowd, the teams stop. It’s a provincial courthouse. Inside, local leaders careful to praise the new boss.
We used to have to go a long way to get to a Taliban court, he says, now we have one right here. The new judge in town, quite literally, laying down the Taliban law, their interpretation of Islamic law. Under Taliban rule in the 1990s’, the Taliban’s Sharia Law led to public amputations for thieves, stoning, even hanging. But in the local market, Sharia Law is not the big concern. It’s making a living.

 


016_탈레반 집권 2부_221221_211103_Daily Life under the Taliban - Part 2


YBM CNN 10
(211103) Daily Life under the Taliban - Part 2
탈레반 집권 하의 일상적인 삶 - 2부
https://cnn.ybmnet.co.kr/cnn_news10/2224

 

CNN - YBMNET

평일 매일 업로드되는 5가지 주제(비즈니스, 연예, 스포츠, 세계, 미국)의 CNN뉴스 영상과 기사에서 현지 아나운서의 정확한 발음과 완성도 높은 문장을 통해 영어 듣기, 읽기, 말하기, 쓰기를 학

cnn.ybmnet.co.kr

CNN 10
(210824 / 04:05) Daily Life, Economics, And A Very Fast Build | September 7, 2021
https://youtu.be/OzGtYeDgLgc

 

 


Transcript

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (TRANSLATED): Business is very bad. We don’t know who’s in charge. Only low-ranked people are here. We don’t know if we can trust them. They are not telling us anything and the situation has not improved. Prices are going up.

REPORTER: In the barbershop, business is down. It’s not only me, he says, but business is bad in the market. It’s not as good as before.

They’re not alone. The local pharmacist is also struggling. Stocks already depleted under the last government. The clinic's maternity nurse also worried about finances, says the previous government didn’t pay her for the past four months and she can’t afford to go home.

Closer to Kabul, another doctor, more problems. Day and night, he says, we get 25 to 30 patients and we have just one doctor and one nurse for them all. Outside the hospital, the Taliban claim an alternate reality.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE (TRANSLATED): Before you didn’t know whether the doctor was coming or not, but now they are there for you all the time.

REPORTER: On this trip, the Taliban’s prioritizing of Sharia Law and bits of charm offensive, seemingly missing Afghans most important needs, a secure livelihood.

반응형