Reading 1. Read the text and define the tense form of the underlined predicates. Form the infinitive from them.



How to save money on your home phone bill

    Families who already face inflation-busting hikes in energy costs are now braced for rises in their phone bills. BT is imposing its fourth price rise in less than two years, with line rental, daytime calls and evening calls all affected. From December 3 line rental costs will go up from £13.90 a month to £14.60, which will mean an extra £8.40 a year.

    The cost of daytime calls will go up from 7.6p a minute to 7.95p, while evening calls will rise from 1p a minute to 1.05p. Michael Phillips, of Homephone choices.co.uk, said: “While BT’s price increases may be in line with inflation, they will prove very unpopular with households already feeling the pinch. Yet there are things you can do to keep home phone bills down. First, you can check what other deals are available by using price comparison sites. Don’t overlook the smaller, niche providers as these often provide the best deals.

    For example, Primus offers the cheapest standalone line rental, starting at just £6.79 per month. The deal, available through Home phonechoices.co.uk, doesn’t include calls so would suit those who use their phones infrequently. Daytime calls cost 6p a minute, evening and weekend calls 1p a minute and there’s a call connection charge of 11p, compared with 13.1p with BT after December’s rise.Heavier users may want to consider Primus’s £7.99-a-month Home Saver which includes evening and weekend calls. For customers who want to stay with BT but still reduce their bills, the Line Rental Saver tariff offers savings of more than £55 against the increased prices provided the yearly cost of £120 is paid up front.

    Another way to make savings is to bundle broadband, phone and TV services together. Packages start from under £20 a month excluding line rental.

BT’s basic Essential TV package, which has 70 channels, broadband and free UK landline calls, costs just £4 for the first four months and £17 thereafter, plus £13.90 line rental (which will rise to £14.60). There’s a £30 set-up cost. Virgin Media offers a similar TV service with the added attraction of fast fibre-optic broadband, ­although it offers free calls only at the weekend. This £20-a-month deal has a £49.95 set-up fee plus £13.90 line rental, which Virgin has no plans as yet to increase. Michael Phillips said: “More people are waking up to the benefits of shopping around, yet more than half of home phone customers haven’t switched providers at all in the past five years.”

Reading 2.  Look through the text.

A) Find and write out all the predicates in the active voice.

B) Form the infinitive from these predicates.

Apple Computer, Inc. (part 1)

 Apple Inc. is an American multinational corporation that designs and sells consumer electronics, computer software, and personal computers. The company's best-known hardware products are the Macintosh line of computers, the iPod, the iPhone and the iPad. Its software includes the Mac OS X operating system; the iTunes media browser; the iLife suite of multimedia and creativity software; the iWork suite of productivity software; Aperture, a professional photography package; Final Cut Studio, a suite of professional audio and film-industry software products; Logic Studio, a suite of music production tools; the Safari web browser; and iOS, a mobile operating system.

    As of July 2011, Apple has 357 retail stores in ten countries, and an online store. It is the largest publicly traded company in the world by market capitalization, overtopping ExxonMobil by some $60 billion, as well as the largest technology company in the world by revenue and profit, worth more than Google and Microsoft combined. As of September 24, 2011, the company had 60,400 permanent full-time employees and 2,900 temporary full-time employees worldwide; its worldwide annual sales totalled $65 billion, growing to $108 billion in 2011.

    Fortune magazine named Apple the most admired company in the United States in 2008, and in the world from 2008 to 2011. However, the company has received widespread criticism for its contractors' labor, and for its environmental and business practices.

 Established on April 1, 1976 in Cupertino, California, and incorporated January 3, 1977,  the company was named Apple Computer, Inc. for its first 30 years. The word "Computer" was removed from its name on January 9, 2007,  as its traditional focus on personal computers shifted towards consumer electronics.

    Apple was established on April 1, 1976 by Steve Jobs, Steve Wozniak, and Ronald Wayne, to sell the Apple I personal computer kit. They were hand-built by Wozniak and first shown to the public at the Homebrew Computer Club. The Apple I was sold as a motherboard (with CPU, RAM, and basic textual-video chips) – less than what is today considered a complete personal computer. The Apple I went on sale in July 1976 and was market-priced at $666.66 ($2,723 in 2012 dollars, adjusted for inflation.)

    Apple was incorporated January 3, 1977 without Wayne, who sold his share of the company back to Jobs and Wozniak for $800. Multi-millionaire Mike Markkula provided essential business expertise and funding of $250,000 during the incorporation of Apple.

    The Apple II was introduced on April 16, 1977 at the first West Coast Computer Faire. It differed from its major rivals, the TRS-80 and Commodore PET, because it came with character cell based color graphics and an open architecture. While early models used ordinary cassette tapes as storage devices, they were superseded by the introduction of a 5 1/4 inch floppy disk drive and interface, the Disk II.

    The Apple II was chosen to be the desktop platform for the first "killer app" of the business world—the VisiCalc spreadsheet program. VisiCalc created a business market for the Apple II, and gave home users an additional reason to buy an Apple II—compatibility with the office. According to Brian Bagnall, Apple exaggerated its sales figures and was a distant third place to Commodore and Tandy until VisiCalc came along.

 By the end of the 1970s, Apple had a staff of computer designers and a production line. The company introduced the ill-fated Apple III in May 1980 in an attempt to compete with IBM and Microsoft in the business and corporate computing market.

    Jobs and several Apple employees including Jef Raskin visited Xerox PARC in December 1979 to see the Xerox Alto. Xerox granted Apple engineers three days of access to the PARC facilities in return for the option to buy 100,000 shares (800,000 split-adjusted shares) of Apple at the pre-IPO price of $10 a share. Jobs was immediately convinced that all future computers would use a graphical user interface (GUI), and development of a GUI began for the Apple Lisa.

    When Apple went public, it generated more capital than any IPO since Ford Motor Company in 1956 and instantly created more millionaires (about 300) than any company in history.


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