Questões de Vestibular IF-RR 2018 para Vestibular - Segundo Semestre

Foram encontradas 56 questões

Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939390 Geografia
Os curdos formam o maior grupo étnico sem um Estado do mundo. São mais de 30 milhões reivindicando um território, chamado de Curdistão, que abrange, em sua maioria, parte do leste da Turquia, além de regiões da Armênia, do Irã, do Iraque e da Síria. Eles são um dos principais responsáveis:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939391 Geografia
A Maioria dos estados paralelos do Oriente médio é de natureza teocrática, levando quase sempre uma política ao radicalismo. Esses Estados só podem ser controlados por ditaduras onde o poder é concentrado na mão de um homem que por meio da repressão controla esses insurgentes. Iniciada na maioria das vezes por grupos dissidentes, o conflito no Oriente Médio ganha maior proporção devido:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939392 Atualidades
Devido à Copa do Mundo de Futebol na Rússia, detalhes sobre um dos maiores países do mundo em extensão e importância econômica têm se tornado mais conhecido. Sobre a história daquele país, é incorreto afirmar:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939393 História
Dentre as chamadas revoluções burguesas destaca-se a revolução industrial. Sobre o tema, assinale o correto:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939394 História
Sobre a proclamação da República, ocorrida em 1889 no Brasil, pode-se afirmar corretamente que:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939395 História
A escravidão marcou as relações de trabalho e produção do período colonial no Brasil e era um dos pilares do sistema de plantation, que também envolvia:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939396 História
Livremente inspirada sobre relações sociais e políticas que marcaram parte da Europa na Idade Média, Game of Thrones é uma história de sucesso mundial, que se passa em continentes fictícios e gira em torno de alianças e conflitos entre famílias nobres que disputam o "Trono de Ferro dos Sete Reinos". Sobre os fatos históricos que inspiraram essa história, é correto afirmar:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939397 História
A prática de prisões arbitrárias, seguida de tortura e mortes foi denunciada e documentada no Brasil com maior intensidade num período recente da história republicana brasileira. Sobre esse período, é correto afirmar que:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939398 Atualidades

Veja a charge de Angeli, publicada em 2011 na Folha de São Paulo e assinale a alternativa que traz informações incorretas:


Imagem associada para resolução da questão

Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939399 Inglês

TEXT 1


      These days, when our slow recovery from recession seems like a full-employment program for pessimistic pundits, it’s great to have a new book from Chris Anderson, an indefatigable cheerleader for the unlimited potential of the digital economy. Anderson, the departing editor in chief of Wired magazine, has already written two important books exploring the impact of the Web on commerce. In “The Long Tail,” he argued that companies like Amazon that faced distribution challenges arising from having large quantities of the same kind of product would thrive by “selling less of more.” Corporations didn’t have to chase blockbusters if they had a mass of small sales. In “Free: The Future of a Radical Price,” he argued that giving stuff away to attract a multitude of users might be the best way eventually to make money from loyal customers. Anderson has also helped found a Web site, Geekdad, and an aerial robotics company. From his vantage point, in the future more and more people can get involved in making things they really enjoy and can connect with others who share their passions and their products. These connections, he claims, are creating a new Industrial Revolution.

      In a 2010 Wired article entitled “In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms Are the New Bits,” Anderson described how the massive changes in our relations with information have altered how we relate to things. Now that the power of information-sharing has been unleashed through technology and social networks, makers are able to collaborate on design and production in ways that facilitate the connection of producers to markets. By sharing information “bits” in a creative commons, entrepreneurs are making new things (reshaping “atoms”) more cheaply and quickly. The new manufacturing is a powerful economic force not because any one business becomes gigantic, but because technology makes it possible for tens of thousands of businesses to find their customers, to form their communities.

Anderson begins his new book, “Makers,” with the story of his grandfather Fred Hauser, who invented a sprinkler system. He licensed his invention to a company that turned ideas into things that could be built and sold. Although Hauser loved translating ideas into things, he needed a company with resources to make enough of his sprinklers to turn a profit. Inventing and making were separate. With the advent of the personal computer and of sophisticated but user-friendly design tools, that separation has become increasingly irrelevant. As a child, Anderson loved making things with his grandfather, and he still loves creating new stuff and getting it into the marketplace. “Makers” describes how today technology has liberated the inventor from a dependence on the big manufacturer. “The beauty of the Web is that it democratized the tools both of invention and production,” Anderson writes. “We are all designers now. It’s time to get good at it.”

(Fragment from “Makers: The New Industrial Revolution by Chris Anderson”, by Michael S. Roth. Online since 24 November 2012. URL:https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/makers-thenew-industrial-revolution)

Choose the only alternative which shows what it is INCORRECT to say about the text:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939400 Inglês

TEXT 1


      These days, when our slow recovery from recession seems like a full-employment program for pessimistic pundits, it’s great to have a new book from Chris Anderson, an indefatigable cheerleader for the unlimited potential of the digital economy. Anderson, the departing editor in chief of Wired magazine, has already written two important books exploring the impact of the Web on commerce. In “The Long Tail,” he argued that companies like Amazon that faced distribution challenges arising from having large quantities of the same kind of product would thrive by “selling less of more.” Corporations didn’t have to chase blockbusters if they had a mass of small sales. In “Free: The Future of a Radical Price,” he argued that giving stuff away to attract a multitude of users might be the best way eventually to make money from loyal customers. Anderson has also helped found a Web site, Geekdad, and an aerial robotics company. From his vantage point, in the future more and more people can get involved in making things they really enjoy and can connect with others who share their passions and their products. These connections, he claims, are creating a new Industrial Revolution.

      In a 2010 Wired article entitled “In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms Are the New Bits,” Anderson described how the massive changes in our relations with information have altered how we relate to things. Now that the power of information-sharing has been unleashed through technology and social networks, makers are able to collaborate on design and production in ways that facilitate the connection of producers to markets. By sharing information “bits” in a creative commons, entrepreneurs are making new things (reshaping “atoms”) more cheaply and quickly. The new manufacturing is a powerful economic force not because any one business becomes gigantic, but because technology makes it possible for tens of thousands of businesses to find their customers, to form their communities.

Anderson begins his new book, “Makers,” with the story of his grandfather Fred Hauser, who invented a sprinkler system. He licensed his invention to a company that turned ideas into things that could be built and sold. Although Hauser loved translating ideas into things, he needed a company with resources to make enough of his sprinklers to turn a profit. Inventing and making were separate. With the advent of the personal computer and of sophisticated but user-friendly design tools, that separation has become increasingly irrelevant. As a child, Anderson loved making things with his grandfather, and he still loves creating new stuff and getting it into the marketplace. “Makers” describes how today technology has liberated the inventor from a dependence on the big manufacturer. “The beauty of the Web is that it democratized the tools both of invention and production,” Anderson writes. “We are all designers now. It’s time to get good at it.”

(Fragment from “Makers: The New Industrial Revolution by Chris Anderson”, by Michael S. Roth. Online since 24 November 2012. URL:https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/makers-thenew-industrial-revolution)

Choose the only alternative which shows what it is INCORRECT to affirm about the second paragraph of the text:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939401 Inglês

TEXT 1


      These days, when our slow recovery from recession seems like a full-employment program for pessimistic pundits, it’s great to have a new book from Chris Anderson, an indefatigable cheerleader for the unlimited potential of the digital economy. Anderson, the departing editor in chief of Wired magazine, has already written two important books exploring the impact of the Web on commerce. In “The Long Tail,” he argued that companies like Amazon that faced distribution challenges arising from having large quantities of the same kind of product would thrive by “selling less of more.” Corporations didn’t have to chase blockbusters if they had a mass of small sales. In “Free: The Future of a Radical Price,” he argued that giving stuff away to attract a multitude of users might be the best way eventually to make money from loyal customers. Anderson has also helped found a Web site, Geekdad, and an aerial robotics company. From his vantage point, in the future more and more people can get involved in making things they really enjoy and can connect with others who share their passions and their products. These connections, he claims, are creating a new Industrial Revolution.

      In a 2010 Wired article entitled “In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms Are the New Bits,” Anderson described how the massive changes in our relations with information have altered how we relate to things. Now that the power of information-sharing has been unleashed through technology and social networks, makers are able to collaborate on design and production in ways that facilitate the connection of producers to markets. By sharing information “bits” in a creative commons, entrepreneurs are making new things (reshaping “atoms”) more cheaply and quickly. The new manufacturing is a powerful economic force not because any one business becomes gigantic, but because technology makes it possible for tens of thousands of businesses to find their customers, to form their communities.

Anderson begins his new book, “Makers,” with the story of his grandfather Fred Hauser, who invented a sprinkler system. He licensed his invention to a company that turned ideas into things that could be built and sold. Although Hauser loved translating ideas into things, he needed a company with resources to make enough of his sprinklers to turn a profit. Inventing and making were separate. With the advent of the personal computer and of sophisticated but user-friendly design tools, that separation has become increasingly irrelevant. As a child, Anderson loved making things with his grandfather, and he still loves creating new stuff and getting it into the marketplace. “Makers” describes how today technology has liberated the inventor from a dependence on the big manufacturer. “The beauty of the Web is that it democratized the tools both of invention and production,” Anderson writes. “We are all designers now. It’s time to get good at it.”

(Fragment from “Makers: The New Industrial Revolution by Chris Anderson”, by Michael S. Roth. Online since 24 November 2012. URL:https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/makers-thenew-industrial-revolution)

Choose the only alternative which shows what it is CORRECT to affirm about the third paragraph of the text:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939402 Inglês

TEXT 1


      These days, when our slow recovery from recession seems like a full-employment program for pessimistic pundits, it’s great to have a new book from Chris Anderson, an indefatigable cheerleader for the unlimited potential of the digital economy. Anderson, the departing editor in chief of Wired magazine, has already written two important books exploring the impact of the Web on commerce. In “The Long Tail,” he argued that companies like Amazon that faced distribution challenges arising from having large quantities of the same kind of product would thrive by “selling less of more.” Corporations didn’t have to chase blockbusters if they had a mass of small sales. In “Free: The Future of a Radical Price,” he argued that giving stuff away to attract a multitude of users might be the best way eventually to make money from loyal customers. Anderson has also helped found a Web site, Geekdad, and an aerial robotics company. From his vantage point, in the future more and more people can get involved in making things they really enjoy and can connect with others who share their passions and their products. These connections, he claims, are creating a new Industrial Revolution.

      In a 2010 Wired article entitled “In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms Are the New Bits,” Anderson described how the massive changes in our relations with information have altered how we relate to things. Now that the power of information-sharing has been unleashed through technology and social networks, makers are able to collaborate on design and production in ways that facilitate the connection of producers to markets. By sharing information “bits” in a creative commons, entrepreneurs are making new things (reshaping “atoms”) more cheaply and quickly. The new manufacturing is a powerful economic force not because any one business becomes gigantic, but because technology makes it possible for tens of thousands of businesses to find their customers, to form their communities.

Anderson begins his new book, “Makers,” with the story of his grandfather Fred Hauser, who invented a sprinkler system. He licensed his invention to a company that turned ideas into things that could be built and sold. Although Hauser loved translating ideas into things, he needed a company with resources to make enough of his sprinklers to turn a profit. Inventing and making were separate. With the advent of the personal computer and of sophisticated but user-friendly design tools, that separation has become increasingly irrelevant. As a child, Anderson loved making things with his grandfather, and he still loves creating new stuff and getting it into the marketplace. “Makers” describes how today technology has liberated the inventor from a dependence on the big manufacturer. “The beauty of the Web is that it democratized the tools both of invention and production,” Anderson writes. “We are all designers now. It’s time to get good at it.”

(Fragment from “Makers: The New Industrial Revolution by Chris Anderson”, by Michael S. Roth. Online since 24 November 2012. URL:https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/makers-thenew-industrial-revolution)

Choose the only INCORRECT alternative about the concept of “Makers”:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939403 Inglês

TEXT 1


      These days, when our slow recovery from recession seems like a full-employment program for pessimistic pundits, it’s great to have a new book from Chris Anderson, an indefatigable cheerleader for the unlimited potential of the digital economy. Anderson, the departing editor in chief of Wired magazine, has already written two important books exploring the impact of the Web on commerce. In “The Long Tail,” he argued that companies like Amazon that faced distribution challenges arising from having large quantities of the same kind of product would thrive by “selling less of more.” Corporations didn’t have to chase blockbusters if they had a mass of small sales. In “Free: The Future of a Radical Price,” he argued that giving stuff away to attract a multitude of users might be the best way eventually to make money from loyal customers. Anderson has also helped found a Web site, Geekdad, and an aerial robotics company. From his vantage point, in the future more and more people can get involved in making things they really enjoy and can connect with others who share their passions and their products. These connections, he claims, are creating a new Industrial Revolution.

      In a 2010 Wired article entitled “In the Next Industrial Revolution, Atoms Are the New Bits,” Anderson described how the massive changes in our relations with information have altered how we relate to things. Now that the power of information-sharing has been unleashed through technology and social networks, makers are able to collaborate on design and production in ways that facilitate the connection of producers to markets. By sharing information “bits” in a creative commons, entrepreneurs are making new things (reshaping “atoms”) more cheaply and quickly. The new manufacturing is a powerful economic force not because any one business becomes gigantic, but because technology makes it possible for tens of thousands of businesses to find their customers, to form their communities.

Anderson begins his new book, “Makers,” with the story of his grandfather Fred Hauser, who invented a sprinkler system. He licensed his invention to a company that turned ideas into things that could be built and sold. Although Hauser loved translating ideas into things, he needed a company with resources to make enough of his sprinklers to turn a profit. Inventing and making were separate. With the advent of the personal computer and of sophisticated but user-friendly design tools, that separation has become increasingly irrelevant. As a child, Anderson loved making things with his grandfather, and he still loves creating new stuff and getting it into the marketplace. “Makers” describes how today technology has liberated the inventor from a dependence on the big manufacturer. “The beauty of the Web is that it democratized the tools both of invention and production,” Anderson writes. “We are all designers now. It’s time to get good at it.”

(Fragment from “Makers: The New Industrial Revolution by Chris Anderson”, by Michael S. Roth. Online since 24 November 2012. URL:https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/makers-thenew-industrial-revolution)

Choose the only CORRECT alternative which exposes an appropriated synonymous to replace the word pundits, detached on the first paragraph:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939404 Inglês

TEXT 2


The first step in establishing a cyber ethical culture is to ask the really tough questions, the answer to which may be politically incorrect. HR (Human resources), legal, security and top management need to work together to set the tone they wish to flow through gaming; other times off-site meetings will work.

The second step is to include cyber ethical components in corporate security awareness campaigns to keep employees clued in.

The last but most important step is to be ready to make changes rapidly when cyber ethics becomes a component of information security efforts. We cannot predict how they will change tomorrow or next year – but we need to be prepared.

(MARINOTTO, Demóstene. Reading on Info Tech (Inglês para Informática). São Paulo, Novatec, 2007.)

About the text 2 is CORRECT to affirm:
Alternativas
Ano: 2018 Banca: INEP Órgão: IF-RR Prova: INEP - 2018 - IF-RR - Vestibular - Segundo Semestre |
Q939405 Inglês

TEXT 2


The first step in establishing a cyber ethical culture is to ask the really tough questions, the answer to which may be politically incorrect. HR (Human resources), legal, security and top management need to work together to set the tone they wish to flow through gaming; other times off-site meetings will work.

The second step is to include cyber ethical components in corporate security awareness campaigns to keep employees clued in.

The last but most important step is to be ready to make changes rapidly when cyber ethics becomes a component of information security efforts. We cannot predict how they will change tomorrow or next year – but we need to be prepared.

(MARINOTTO, Demóstene. Reading on Info Tech (Inglês para Informática). São Paulo, Novatec, 2007.)

About the meaning of ethical, choose the alternative which brings an INCORRECT synonym:
Alternativas
Respostas
33: E
34: B
35: E
36: A
37: D
38: B
39: E
40: A
41: C
42: A
43: D
44: B
45: E
46: C
47: D
48: A