Questões de Concurso Público DATAPREV 2009 para Analista de Tecnologia da Informação - Análise de Informações

Foram encontradas 60 questões

Q112897 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

The title of the text let us know that there must be a close relation between…
Alternativas
Q112898 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

The reason given in the third paragraph of the text for the problemwith smaller gadgets is that…
Alternativas
Q112901 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

Choose the best option.

Dumping your entire music collection _____ your iPod is a simple, one click process. But what about getting your music _____ your iPod?
Alternativas
Q112902 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

Boeing ____ this week that it ____ successfully ____ a manned airplane powered _____ hydrogen fuel cells.
Alternativas
Q112904 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

If this scientific breakthrough is reliable, after years testing it, it _____ lead to the cure of this type of cancer in the future.
Alternativas
Q112905 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

He was very precise about the proper procedure and the material to be used, he said he didn't want anything especial, only the regular, _____ one.
Alternativas
Q113008 Conhecimentos Gerais
Exemplos de materiais semicondutores inorgânicos responsáveis pelo grande desenvolvimento tecnológico atual na área da microeletrônica e na fabricação de microchips são:
Alternativas
Q113013 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.



Robots ____ have the brains to "intelligently and autonomously search ____ objects" _____ their own.
Alternativas
Q113179 Conhecimentos Gerais
“O executivo americano KenMusgrave, coloca o pequeno retângulo de acrílico vermelho, um PC de mesa, ao lado de um PC normal, uma trivial caixa de alumínio cinza-chumbo. "Ambos têm as mesmas funcionalidades e capacidade de processamento", afirma diante das duas máquinas. "A diferença é que o modelo novo tem quase um quinto do tamanho do antigo e, portanto, precisa de muito menos material para ser fabricado. Fora isso, consome quase 70% menos energia”.
O computador apresentado por Musgrave é considerado o que há de mais inovador do ponto de vista ambiental. "É o equipamento que melhor traduz o conceito de green IT (tecnologia da informação verde)", (...) o produto é diferenciado por reduzir o impacto ambiental de variadas formas - namenor quantidade de energia que será consumida durante sua vida útil, na redução demateriais que o compõem e até na embalagem, que é 95%reciclável”.

(Adaptado de http://info.abril.com.br/professional/ti-verde/quero-ser- verde.shtml)

A sustentabilidade é um importante aspecto da relação do homem moderno com o seu ambiente, que, no caso acima, envolve diretamente:
Alternativas
Q113180 Conhecimentos Gerais
“Depois de quase um ano de tentativas, os cientistas conseguiram transformar as células-tronco da gordura em células musculares humanas no corpo dos camundongos. E junto comelas, veio tambémumresultado impressionante. Os camundongos tinham distrofia muscular, uma doença genética grave que afeta a força dos músculos aos poucos e que ainda não tem cura. Um camundongo que não recebeu células-tronco, por causa da distrofia muscular, não conseguia se segurar no arame e caía. Já o camundongo que recebeu as células-tronco de gordura se agarrava com firmeza ao arame. As células de gordura viraram músculos que funcionam.”

(Disponível em http://g1.globo.com/Noticias/Ciencia/0,,MUL913218- 5603,00-CIENTISTAS+TRANSFORMAM+CELULASTRONCO+ DE+GORDURA+EM+CELULAS+MUSCULARES.html)

As células-tronco podemsermuito úteis namedicina, pois:
Alternativas
Q113181 Conhecimentos Gerais
Sobre o item Meu Computador, analise:

I. Pode-se copiar arquivos e pastas,mas nunca atalhos.

II. É possível apagar arquivos enviando a lixeira.

III. Só é possível mover arquivos e atalhos.

Dos itens acima mencionados:
Alternativas
Q113182 Conhecimentos Gerais
Para selecionar várias células de uma mesma coluna numa Planilha utilizando o MS-Excel, deve-se manter pressionada a tecla ( ou combinação de teclas):
Alternativas
Q113183 Conhecimentos Gerais
Conflitos de hardware ocorrem quando dois ou mais dispositivos utilizam o mesmo recurso.A opção que possue os recursos de hardware que podem entrar em conflito é:
Alternativas
Q113184 Conhecimentos Gerais
No Menu Exibir do Windows Explorer, a opção que faz com que o modo exibição dos arquivos e pastas forneça informações tais como nome, tipo, tamanho e data de modificação é:
Alternativas
Q113185 Raciocínio Lógico
A única das proposições abaixo que pode ser considerada uma negação lógica da proposição: "Se é feriado, então vou à praia" , é :
Alternativas
Q113186 Raciocínio Lógico
Sejam V (verdadeiro) e F (falso) os valores lógicos associados às proposições compostas a seguir.

I. O cachorro é mamífero ou vaca voa. ( )

II. Se cachorro é mamífero, então vaca voa. ( )

III. O cachorro é mamífero e vaca voa. ( )

IV. O cachorro é mamífero, se e somente se vaca voa. ( )

A seqüência ordenada dos valores lógicos obtidos é:
Alternativas
Q113187 Raciocínio Lógico
Dentre os argumentos lógicos apresentados abaixo, o único que é um silogismo é:
Alternativas
Q113188 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

In the sentence: “But as they shrink, these gadgets with problems mammals face too, such as dissipating heat.” First paragraph, the author of the text believes that…
Alternativas
Q113189 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

According to the text industrial designers' jobs have become more difficult because they…
Alternativas
Q113190 Inglês
GadgetDesigners Push the Limits of Size, Safety
By Brian X. Chen, August 28, 2008

Just as small, fast-moving mammals replaced lumbering
dinosaurs, pocketable gadgets are evolving to fill niches that
larger, deskbound computers can't reach. But as they shrink,
these gadgets are faced with problems mammals face, too,
such as efficiently dissipating heat.

The recent example of Apple's first-generation iPod nanos
causing fires in Japan raises the question of whether
increasingly innovative product designs are impinging on
safety. The nano incident illustrates how risk can increase as
devices decrease in size, says Roger Kay, an analyst at
EndpointTechnologies.

"As [gadgets] get smaller, the tradeoffs become more difficult,
the balance becomes more critical and there's less room for
error," Kay said. "I'm not surprised it's happening to the nano
because that's the small one. You're asking it to do a lot in a
very, very small package and that's pushing the envelope.”

There's no question that industrial designers' jobs have
become much more difficult as the industry demands ever
more powerful and smaller gadgets. With paper-thin
subnotebooks, ultrasmall MP3 players, and pinkie finger-
sized Bluetooth headsets becoming increasingly popular, it's
questionable where exactly designers draw the line between
innovation and safety.

The expression such as in the last line of the first paragraph could be changed by ____ and its meaning would not altered.
Alternativas
Respostas
1: D
2: A
3: D
4: C
5: C
6: B
7: B
8: D
9: E
10: A
11: B
12: B
13: A
14: E
15: E
16: A
17: A
18: B
19: B
20: B