Magna Concursos

Foram encontradas 100 questões.

2387932 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instruções: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.

HP TouchSmart 300: 20-Inch Multitouch All-in-One Has an HDTV Tuner
Nate Ralph

PC World - Dec 24, 2009 5:10 pm

HP is no stranger to the all-in-one market, having churned out a number of multitouch-capable machines under the TouchSmart line. But at $930 (as of 12/23/2009), the HP TouchSmart 300 occupies a somewhat peculiar niche.

At 20 inches, it's a bit small to serve as your primary media center, but it costs more than similarly sized budget all-in-one PCs (20 inches or smaller). It also outperforms them all, scoring 98 on the WorldBench 6 test suite. This places the TouchSmart 300 well ahead of touch enabled, budget-priced competitors like the 20-inch MSI Wind Top AE2010 (60), and tantalizingly close to pricier rivals like the 24-inch Sony Vaio L117FX/B (105). It also scored slightly higher than its larger sibling, the 23-inch HP TouchSmart 600 (92).

The star of the show is HP's custom TouchSmart software. It offers full-screen, touch-friendly widgets for media playback, browsing, and manipulating photos, and for accessing popular Web applications like Hulu, Pandora, and Twitter. But while the software is typically quite responsive, we found its performance on the TouchSmart 300 to be a bit sluggish.

(Adapted from http://www.pcworld.com/reviews.html)

No início do texto, churned out significa
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387931 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instrução: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.
CES 2010 Predictions: What Will Be Hot Next Year?
12.23.09
The tech industry is gearing up for January's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but what should we expect? Will recession woes continue to hinder major announcements or will someone surprise us? We asked our analysts to [VERB] a few predictions about [PRON] you can expect to see from CES.

Laptops – Cisco Cheng

Laptops and Netbooks at CES 2010 will be riding the coat tails of Intel, which has already announced new processors and chipsets in "Arrandale" (for laptops) and "Pinetrail" (for netbooks). So this year you'll see processor brand names such as Intel Core i7, Core i5, and Core i3 instead of the soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos.

With netbooks, it'll still be the Atom processor, but around it will be a different supporting cast and a more energy efficient one at that, promising over 10 hours of battery life.

Not all clamshells will have an Intel processor, though. This year's CES 2010 will give rise to a new class of netbooks, called SmartBooks and tablets.

SmartBooks will run some variant of an ARM processor, with Qualcomm being a heavy favorite. They will not run a Windows operating system (Linux, most likely) and promise to cost as little as $200 per device. The term tablet is similar to SmartBooks in parts and software, only it won't have a physical keyboard, or at least one that's permanently attached. Tablets will take the e-book reader space to the next level and hopefully have more success than MIDs − the previous term for touchenabled netbooks without a keyboard.


Desktops – Joel Santo Domingo

The netbook revolution of 2009 has benefitted the desktop space. The same power-saving processors and motherboard chips from netbooks are now showing up in a plethora of ultra small nettop PCs.

While these desktops do not promise better battery life, they do promise smaller, quieter systems, which can be hooked up to large displays, like the 50-inch HDTV in your living room.

Don't count "traditional" desktops out though: they're still the go-to PCs in a business setting, particularly since they're less fragile and easier to service than laptops. Besides, traditional workers who live in cubicles don't need the portability of a netbook or notebook PC. They're going to get smaller, but desktops will still be on workers' desks for quite a few years to come.

(Adapted from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357541,00.asp)

The pronoun They in They're going to get smaller (highlighted at the end of the text) refers to
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387930 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instrução: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.
CES 2010 Predictions: What Will Be Hot Next Year?
12.23.09
The tech industry is gearing up for January's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but what should we expect? Will recession woes continue to hinder major announcements or will someone surprise us? We asked our analysts to [VERB] a few predictions about [PRON] you can expect to see from CES.

Laptops – Cisco Cheng

Laptops and Netbooks at CES 2010 will be riding the coat tails of Intel, which has already announced new processors and chipsets in "Arrandale" (for laptops) and "Pinetrail" (for netbooks). So this year you'll see processor brand names such as Intel Core i7, Core i5, and Core i3 instead of the soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos.

With netbooks, it'll still be the Atom processor, but around it will be a different supporting cast and a more energy efficient one at that, promising over 10 hours of battery life.

Not all clamshells will have an Intel processor, though. This year's CES 2010 will give rise to a new class of netbooks, called SmartBooks and tablets.

SmartBooks will run some variant of an ARM processor, with Qualcomm being a heavy favorite. They will not run a Windows operating system (Linux, most likely) and promise to cost as little as $200 per device. The term tablet is similar to SmartBooks in parts and software, only it won't have a physical keyboard, or at least one that's permanently attached. Tablets will take the e-book reader space to the next level and hopefully have more success than MIDs − the previous term for touchenabled netbooks without a keyboard.


Desktops – Joel Santo Domingo

The netbook revolution of 2009 has benefitted the desktop space. The same power-saving processors and motherboard chips from netbooks are now showing up in a plethora of ultra small nettop PCs.

While these desktops do not promise better battery life, they do promise smaller, quieter systems, which can be hooked up to large displays, like the 50-inch HDTV in your living room.

Don't count "traditional" desktops out though: they're still the go-to PCs in a business setting, particularly since they're less fragile and easier to service than laptops. Besides, traditional workers who live in cubicles don't need the portability of a netbook or notebook PC. They're going to get smaller, but desktops will still be on workers' desks for quite a few years to come.

(Adapted from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357541,00.asp)

De acordo com o texto,
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387929 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instrução: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.
CES 2010 Predictions: What Will Be Hot Next Year?
12.23.09
The tech industry is gearing up for January's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but what should we expect? Will recession woes continue to hinder major announcements or will someone surprise us? We asked our analysts to [VERB] a few predictions about [PRON] you can expect to see from CES.

Laptops – Cisco Cheng

Laptops and Netbooks at CES 2010 will be riding the coat tails of Intel, which has already announced new processors and chipsets in "Arrandale" (for laptops) and "Pinetrail" (for netbooks). So this year you'll see processor brand names such as Intel Core i7, Core i5, and Core i3 instead of the soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos.

With netbooks, it'll still be the Atom processor, but around it will be a different supporting cast and a more energy efficient one at that, promising over 10 hours of battery life.

Not all clamshells will have an Intel processor, though. This year's CES 2010 will give rise to a new class of netbooks, called SmartBooks and tablets.

SmartBooks will run some variant of an ARM processor, with Qualcomm being a heavy favorite. They will not run a Windows operating system (Linux, most likely) and promise to cost as little as $200 per device. The term tablet is similar to SmartBooks in parts and software, only it won't have a physical keyboard, or at least one that's permanently attached. Tablets will take the e-book reader space to the next level and hopefully have more success than MIDs − the previous term for touchenabled netbooks without a keyboard.


Desktops – Joel Santo Domingo

The netbook revolution of 2009 has benefitted the desktop space. The same power-saving processors and motherboard chips from netbooks are now showing up in a plethora of ultra small nettop PCs.

While these desktops do not promise better battery life, they do promise smaller, quieter systems, which can be hooked up to large displays, like the 50-inch HDTV in your living room.

Don't count "traditional" desktops out though: they're still the go-to PCs in a business setting, particularly since they're less fragile and easier to service than laptops. Besides, traditional workers who live in cubicles don't need the portability of a netbook or notebook PC. They're going to get smaller, but desktops will still be on workers' desks for quite a few years to come.

(Adapted from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357541,00.asp)

Segundo o texto,
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387928 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instrução: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.
CES 2010 Predictions: What Will Be Hot Next Year?
12.23.09
The tech industry is gearing up for January's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but what should we expect? Will recession woes continue to hinder major announcements or will someone surprise us? We asked our analysts to [VERB] a few predictions about [PRON] you can expect to see from CES.

Laptops – Cisco Cheng

Laptops and Netbooks at CES 2010 will be riding the coat tails of Intel, which has already announced new processors and chipsets in "Arrandale" (for laptops) and "Pinetrail" (for netbooks). So this year you'll see processor brand names such as Intel Core i7, Core i5, and Core i3 instead of the soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos.

With netbooks, it'll still be the Atom processor, but around it will be a different supporting cast and a more energy efficient one at that, promising over 10 hours of battery life.

Not all clamshells will have an Intel processor, though. This year's CES 2010 will give rise to a new class of netbooks, called SmartBooks and tablets.

SmartBooks will run some variant of an ARM processor, with Qualcomm being a heavy favorite. They will not run a Windows operating system (Linux, most likely) and promise to cost as little as $200 per device. The term tablet is similar to SmartBooks in parts and software, only it won't have a physical keyboard, or at least one that's permanently attached. Tablets will take the e-book reader space to the next level and hopefully have more success than MIDs − the previous term for touchenabled netbooks without a keyboard.


Desktops – Joel Santo Domingo

The netbook revolution of 2009 has benefitted the desktop space. The same power-saving processors and motherboard chips from netbooks are now showing up in a plethora of ultra small nettop PCs.

While these desktops do not promise better battery life, they do promise smaller, quieter systems, which can be hooked up to large displays, like the 50-inch HDTV in your living room.

Don't count "traditional" desktops out though: they're still the go-to PCs in a business setting, particularly since they're less fragile and easier to service than laptops. Besides, traditional workers who live in cubicles don't need the portability of a netbook or notebook PC. They're going to get smaller, but desktops will still be on workers' desks for quite a few years to come.

(Adapted from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357541,00.asp)

A synonym for While (highlighted in the one before last paragraph), as used in the text, is
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387927 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instrução: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.
CES 2010 Predictions: What Will Be Hot Next Year?
12.23.09
The tech industry is gearing up for January's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but what should we expect? Will recession woes continue to hinder major announcements or will someone surprise us? We asked our analysts to [VERB] a few predictions about [PRON] you can expect to see from CES.

Laptops – Cisco Cheng

Laptops and Netbooks at CES 2010 will be riding the coat tails of Intel, which has already announced new processors and chipsets in "Arrandale" (for laptops) and "Pinetrail" (for netbooks). So this year you'll see processor brand names such as Intel Core i7, Core i5, and Core i3 instead of the soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos.

With netbooks, it'll still be the Atom processor, but around it will be a different supporting cast and a more energy efficient one at that, promising over 10 hours of battery life.

Not all clamshells will have an Intel processor, though. This year's CES 2010 will give rise to a new class of netbooks, called SmartBooks and tablets.

SmartBooks will run some variant of an ARM processor, with Qualcomm being a heavy favorite. They will not run a Windows operating system (Linux, most likely) and promise to cost as little as $200 per device. The term tablet is similar to SmartBooks in parts and software, only it won't have a physical keyboard, or at least one that's permanently attached. Tablets will take the e-book reader space to the next level and hopefully have more success than MIDs − the previous term for touchenabled netbooks without a keyboard.


Desktops – Joel Santo Domingo

The netbook revolution of 2009 has benefitted the desktop space. The same power-saving processors and motherboard chips from netbooks are now showing up in a plethora of ultra small nettop PCs.

While these desktops do not promise better battery life, they do promise smaller, quieter systems, which can be hooked up to large displays, like the 50-inch HDTV in your living room.

Don't count "traditional" desktops out though: they're still the go-to PCs in a business setting, particularly since they're less fragile and easier to service than laptops. Besides, traditional workers who live in cubicles don't need the portability of a netbook or notebook PC. They're going to get smaller, but desktops will still be on workers' desks for quite a few years to come.

(Adapted from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357541,00.asp)

In the text, soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos means that Core 2 Duos
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387926 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instrução: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.
CES 2010 Predictions: What Will Be Hot Next Year?
12.23.09
The tech industry is gearing up for January's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but what should we expect? Will recession woes continue to hinder major announcements or will someone surprise us? We asked our analysts to [VERB] a few predictions about [PRON] you can expect to see from CES.

Laptops – Cisco Cheng

Laptops and Netbooks at CES 2010 will be riding the coat tails of Intel, which has already announced new processors and chipsets in "Arrandale" (for laptops) and "Pinetrail" (for netbooks). So this year you'll see processor brand names such as Intel Core i7, Core i5, and Core i3 instead of the soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos.

With netbooks, it'll still be the Atom processor, but around it will be a different supporting cast and a more energy efficient one at that, promising over 10 hours of battery life.

Not all clamshells will have an Intel processor, though. This year's CES 2010 will give rise to a new class of netbooks, called SmartBooks and tablets.

SmartBooks will run some variant of an ARM processor, with Qualcomm being a heavy favorite. They will not run a Windows operating system (Linux, most likely) and promise to cost as little as $200 per device. The term tablet is similar to SmartBooks in parts and software, only it won't have a physical keyboard, or at least one that's permanently attached. Tablets will take the e-book reader space to the next level and hopefully have more success than MIDs − the previous term for touchenabled netbooks without a keyboard.


Desktops – Joel Santo Domingo

The netbook revolution of 2009 has benefitted the desktop space. The same power-saving processors and motherboard chips from netbooks are now showing up in a plethora of ultra small nettop PCs.

While these desktops do not promise better battery life, they do promise smaller, quieter systems, which can be hooked up to large displays, like the 50-inch HDTV in your living room.

Don't count "traditional" desktops out though: they're still the go-to PCs in a business setting, particularly since they're less fragile and easier to service than laptops. Besides, traditional workers who live in cubicles don't need the portability of a netbook or notebook PC. They're going to get smaller, but desktops will still be on workers' desks for quite a few years to come.

(Adapted from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357541,00.asp)

The correct pronoun to replace [PRON] (highlighted in the 1st paragraph) is
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387925 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP
Instrução: Para responder a questão, considere o texto abaixo.
CES 2010 Predictions: What Will Be Hot Next Year?
12.23.09
The tech industry is gearing up for January's Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas, but what should we expect? Will recession woes continue to hinder major announcements or will someone surprise us? We asked our analysts to [VERB] a few predictions about [PRON] you can expect to see from CES.

Laptops – Cisco Cheng

Laptops and Netbooks at CES 2010 will be riding the coat tails of Intel, which has already announced new processors and chipsets in "Arrandale" (for laptops) and "Pinetrail" (for netbooks). So this year you'll see processor brand names such as Intel Core i7, Core i5, and Core i3 instead of the soon-to-be exiting Core 2 Duos.

With netbooks, it'll still be the Atom processor, but around it will be a different supporting cast and a more energy efficient one at that, promising over 10 hours of battery life.

Not all clamshells will have an Intel processor, though. This year's CES 2010 will give rise to a new class of netbooks, called SmartBooks and tablets.

SmartBooks will run some variant of an ARM processor, with Qualcomm being a heavy favorite. They will not run a Windows operating system (Linux, most likely) and promise to cost as little as $200 per device. The term tablet is similar to SmartBooks in parts and software, only it won't have a physical keyboard, or at least one that's permanently attached. Tablets will take the e-book reader space to the next level and hopefully have more success than MIDs − the previous term for touchenabled netbooks without a keyboard.


Desktops – Joel Santo Domingo

The netbook revolution of 2009 has benefitted the desktop space. The same power-saving processors and motherboard chips from netbooks are now showing up in a plethora of ultra small nettop PCs.

While these desktops do not promise better battery life, they do promise smaller, quieter systems, which can be hooked up to large displays, like the 50-inch HDTV in your living room.

Don't count "traditional" desktops out though: they're still the go-to PCs in a business setting, particularly since they're less fragile and easier to service than laptops. Besides, traditional workers who live in cubicles don't need the portability of a netbook or notebook PC. They're going to get smaller, but desktops will still be on workers' desks for quite a few years to come.

(Adapted from http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2357541,00.asp)

The verb that correctly replaces [VERB] (highlighted in the 1st paragraph) is
 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387924 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Português
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP

Atenção: A questão baseia-se no texto apresentado abaixo.

Vários estudos têm alertado que tanto a população da Terra quanto os níveis de consumo crescem mais rapidamente do que a capacidade de regeneração dos sistemas naturais. Um dos mais recentes, o relatório Planeta Vivo elaborado pela ONG internacional WWF, estima que atualmente três quartos da população mundial vivem em países que consomem mais recursos do que conseguem repor.

Só Estados Unidos e China consomem, cada um, 21% dos recursos naturais do planeta. Até 1960, a maior parte dos países vivia dentro de seus limites ecológicos. Em poucas décadas do atual modelo de produção e consumo, a humanidade exauriu 60% da água disponível e dizimou um terço das espécies vivas do planeta.

"O argumento de que o crescimento econômico é a solução já não basta. Não há recursos naturais para suportar o crescimento constante. A Terra é finita e a economia clássica sempre ignorou essa verdade elementar", afirma o ecoeconomista Hugo Penteado. Ele não está sozinho. A urgência dos problemas ambientais e suas implicações para a economia das nações têm sido terreno fértil para o desenvolvimento da ecoeconomia, ou economia ecológica, que não é exatamente nova. Seus principais expoentes começaram a surgir na década de 1960. Hoje, estão paulatinamente ganhando projeção graças à visibilidade que o tema sustentabilidade conquistou.

Para essa escola, as novas métricas para medir o crescimento não bastam, embora sejam bem-vindas em um processo de transição. Para a ecoeconomia, é preciso parar de crescer em níveis exponenciais e reproduzir – ou "biomimetizar" – os ciclos da natureza: para ser sustentável, a economia deve caminhar para ser cada vez mais parecida com os processos naturais.

"A economia baseada no mecanicismo não oferece mais respostas. É preciso encontrar um novo modelo, que dê respostas a questões como geração de empregos, desenvolvimento com qualidade e até mesmo uma desmaterialização do sistema. Vender serviços, não apenas produtos, e também produzir em ciclos fechados, sem desperdício", afirma o professor Paulo Durval Branco, da Escola Superior de Conservação Ambiental. De acordo com ele, embora as empresas venham repetindo a palavra sustentabilidade como um mantra, são pouquíssimas as que fizeram mudanças efetivas em seus modelos de negócio. O desperdício de matérias-primas, o estímulo ao consumismo e a obsolescência programada (bens fabricados com data certa para serem substituídos) ainda ditam as regras.

(Texto adaptado do artigo de Andrea Vialli. O Estado de S. Paulo, H4 Especial, Vida &Sustentabilidade, 15 de maio de 2009)

Houve promessas de que o crescimento do PIB seria importante para reduzir a pobreza.

As desigualdades econômicas se mantêm.

A cada US$ 160 produzidos no mundo, só US$ 0,60 chegam efetivamente aos mais pobres.


As frases acima articulam-se em um único período com correção, clareza e lógica, em:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
2387923 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Português
Banca: FCC
Orgão: TCE-SP

Atenção: A questão baseia-se no texto apresentado abaixo.

Vários estudos têm alertado que tanto a população da Terra quanto os níveis de consumo crescem mais rapidamente do que a capacidade de regeneração dos sistemas naturais. Um dos mais recentes, o relatório Planeta Vivo elaborado pela ONG internacional WWF, estima que atualmente três quartos da população mundial vivem em países que consomem mais recursos do que conseguem repor.

Só Estados Unidos e China consomem, cada um, 21% dos recursos naturais do planeta. Até 1960, a maior parte dos países vivia dentro de seus limites ecológicos. Em poucas décadas do atual modelo de produção e consumo, a humanidade exauriu 60% da água disponível e dizimou um terço das espécies vivas do planeta.

"O argumento de que o crescimento econômico é a solução já não basta. Não há recursos naturais para suportar o crescimento constante. A Terra é finita e a economia clássica sempre ignorou essa verdade elementar", afirma o ecoeconomista Hugo Penteado. Ele não está sozinho. A urgência dos problemas ambientais e suas implicações para a economia das nações têm sido terreno fértil para o desenvolvimento da ecoeconomia, ou economia ecológica, que não é exatamente nova. Seus principais expoentes começaram a surgir na década de 1960. Hoje, estão paulatinamente ganhando projeção graças à visibilidade que o tema sustentabilidade conquistou.

Para essa escola, as novas métricas para medir o crescimento não bastam, embora sejam bem-vindas em um processo de transição. Para a ecoeconomia, é preciso parar de crescer em níveis exponenciais e reproduzir – ou "biomimetizar" – os ciclos da natureza: para ser sustentável, a economia deve caminhar para ser cada vez mais parecida com os processos naturais.

"A economia baseada no mecanicismo não oferece mais respostas. É preciso encontrar um novo modelo, que dê respostas a questões como geração de empregos, desenvolvimento com qualidade e até mesmo uma desmaterialização do sistema. Vender serviços, não apenas produtos, e também produzir em ciclos fechados, sem desperdício", afirma o professor Paulo Durval Branco, da Escola Superior de Conservação Ambiental. De acordo com ele, embora as empresas venham repetindo a palavra sustentabilidade como um mantra, são pouquíssimas as que fizeram mudanças efetivas em seus modelos de negócio. O desperdício de matérias-primas, o estímulo ao consumismo e a obsolescência programada (bens fabricados com data certa para serem substituídos) ainda ditam as regras.

(Texto adaptado do artigo de Andrea Vialli. O Estado de S. Paulo, H4 Especial, Vida &Sustentabilidade, 15 de maio de 2009)

A transição rumo ...... economia sustentável deve considerar uma produção limitada ...... necessidade de reposição dos itens, e o fabricante prestaria serviços vinculados ...... bens alugados, como manutenção, recolhimento e reciclagem.

As lacunas da frase acima estarão corretamente preenchidas, respectivamente, por:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas