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Young, smart and online

In 1996, company executive Tom Williams was seventeen. Designer Benjamin Carson was thirteen. Webmaster Monika Bough was twelve. If rock and roll and television defined the generation of their parents, now a new technology and culture are destined to define theirs.

At age twelve, just before Tomwent to high school, in Canada, he started his company, making and selling computer games. Shortly after that he spent three years with Apple Computer in California.

Tom came back to Canada in early 1996 with a plan to combine his programming skills, his frustration with the school system and his knowledge of the Internet. He and his colleagues created a new type of Internet educational magazine, aimed first at the schools across Canada and then the U.S. The irony is that the boy who left school at fourteen because he didn't like it, is now developing material which will help other kids stay in school.

Monika Bough's dad is in the U.S. Navy and he is always moving. The family has already lived in Japan, Spain, California andArgentina.

Now they moved to Whidbey Island,Washington, but that isn't a problem for Monika. No matter where they are she is always talking to all the members of GIRL (Girls Internationally wRiting Letters), the club she formed on the Internet.

GIRL started as a group of e-pals who were interested in writing and now it has hundreds of girls from all over the place who want to discover the world together, write poems, share secrets, and keep in touch with their pal Monika.

The Internet has also made a connection on the streets of East Palo Alto, California, where Benjamin Carson developed a slightly different relationship with the technology. In East Palo Alto unemployment is high, salaries low, and cyberspace seems to be a place very far away, until you come to the home of Plugged In. Here the staff and volunteers introduce local kids to the Internet.

It began about six years ago and Benjamin Carson was here at the start. Ben has a natural talent for design and working at Plugged In is helping him to focus on finishing school and going to university.

(…)

Definitely these kids are part of the first generation to grow up with life on the Internet.

Adapted from COSTA, Marcelo Baccarin. Globetrotter: Inglês para o ensino médio. Macmillan 2001. Page 41.

Imagine that Monika Bough told her e-pal, Samantha Wills, the following extract: '(…) the staff and volunteers introduce local kids to the Internet. It began about six years ago (…)'. If you wish to report this extract, you could say that Monika told Samantha that:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

Young, smart and online

In 1996, company executive Tom Williams was seventeen. Designer Benjamin Carson was thirteen. Webmaster Monika Bough was twelve. If rock and roll and television defined the generation of their parents, now a new technology and culture are destined to define theirs.

At age twelve, just before Tomwent to high school, in Canada, he started his company, making and selling computer games. Shortly after that he spent three years with Apple Computer in California.

Tom came back to Canada in early 1996 with a plan to combine his programming skills, his frustration with the school system and his knowledge of the Internet. He and his colleagues created a new type of Internet educational magazine, aimed first at the schools across Canada and then the U.S. The irony is that the boy who left school at fourteen because he didn't like it, is now developing material which will help other kids stay in school.

Monika Bough's dad is in the U.S. Navy and he is always moving. The family has already lived in Japan, Spain, California andArgentina.

Now they moved to Whidbey Island,Washington, but that isn't a problem for Monika. No matter where they are she is always talking to all the members of GIRL (Girls Internationally wRiting Letters), the club she formed on the Internet.

GIRL started as a group of e-pals who were interested in writing and now it has hundreds of girls from all over the place who want to discover the world together, write poems, share secrets, and keep in touch with their pal Monika.

The Internet has also made a connection on the streets of East Palo Alto, California, where Benjamin Carson developed a slightly different relationship with the technology. In East Palo Alto unemployment is high, salaries low, and cyberspace seems to be a place very far away, until you come to the home of Plugged In. Here the staff and volunteers introduce local kids to the Internet.

It began about six years ago and Benjamin Carson was here at the start. Ben has a natural talent for design and working at Plugged In is helping him to focus on finishing school and going to university.

(…)

Definitely these kids are part of the first generation to grow up with life on the Internet.

Adapted from COSTA, Marcelo Baccarin. Globetrotter: Inglês para o ensino médio. Macmillan 2001. Page 41.

'Plugged In' is a very particular place in East Palo Alto because the:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

Young, smart and online

In 1996, company executive Tom Williams was seventeen. Designer Benjamin Carson was thirteen. Webmaster Monika Bough was twelve. If rock and roll and television defined the generation of their parents, now a new technology and culture are destined to define theirs.

At age twelve, just before Tomwent to high school, in Canada, he started his company, making and selling computer games. Shortly after that he spent three years with Apple Computer in California.

Tom came back to Canada in early 1996 with a plan to combine his programming skills, his frustration with the school system and his knowledge of the Internet. He and his colleagues created a new type of Internet educational magazine, aimed first at the schools across Canada and then the U.S. The irony is that the boy who left school at fourteen because he didn't like it, is now developing material which will help other kids stay in school.

Monika Bough's dad is in the U.S. Navy and he is always moving. The family has already lived in Japan, Spain, California andArgentina.

Now they moved to Whidbey Island,Washington, but that isn't a problem for Monika. No matter where they are she is always talking to all the members of GIRL (Girls Internationally wRiting Letters), the club she formed on the Internet.

GIRL started as a group of e-pals who were interested in writing and now it has hundreds of girls from all over the place who want to discover the world together, write poems, share secrets, and keep in touch with their pal Monika.

The Internet has also made a connection on the streets of East Palo Alto, California, where Benjamin Carson developed a slightly different relationship with the technology. In East Palo Alto unemployment is high, salaries low, and cyberspace seems to be a place very far away, until you come to the home of Plugged In. Here the staff and volunteers introduce local kids to the Internet.

It began about six years ago and Benjamin Carson was here at the start. Ben has a natural talent for design and working at Plugged In is helping him to focus on finishing school and going to university.

(…)

Definitely these kids are part of the first generation to grow up with life on the Internet.

Adapted from COSTA, Marcelo Baccarin. Globetrotter: Inglês para o ensino médio. Macmillan 2001. Page 41.

An interesting aspect of Tom Williams' life is that:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas

Young, smart and online

In 1996, company executive Tom Williams was seventeen. Designer Benjamin Carson was thirteen. Webmaster Monika Bough was twelve. If rock and roll and television defined the generation of their parents, now a new technology and culture are destined to define theirs.

At age twelve, just before Tomwent to high school, in Canada, he started his company, making and selling computer games. Shortly after that he spent three years with Apple Computer in California.

Tom came back to Canada in early 1996 with a plan to combine his programming skills, his frustration with the school system and his knowledge of the Internet. He and his colleagues created a new type of Internet educational magazine, aimed first at the schools across Canada and then the U.S. The irony is that the boy who left school at fourteen because he didn't like it, is now developing material which will help other kids stay in school.

Monika Bough's dad is in the U.S. Navy and he is always moving. The family has already lived in Japan, Spain, California andArgentina.

Now they moved to Whidbey Island,Washington, but that isn't a problem for Monika. No matter where they are she is always talking to all the members of GIRL (Girls Internationally wRiting Letters), the club she formed on the Internet.

GIRL started as a group of e-pals who were interested in writing and now it has hundreds of girls from all over the place who want to discover the world together, write poems, share secrets, and keep in touch with their pal Monika.

The Internet has also made a connection on the streets of East Palo Alto, California, where Benjamin Carson developed a slightly different relationship with the technology. In East Palo Alto unemployment is high, salaries low, and cyberspace seems to be a place very far away, until you come to the home of Plugged In. Here the staff and volunteers introduce local kids to the Internet.

It began about six years ago and Benjamin Carson was here at the start. Ben has a natural talent for design and working at Plugged In is helping him to focus on finishing school and going to university.

(…)

Definitely these kids are part of the first generation to grow up with life on the Internet.

Adapted from COSTA, Marcelo Baccarin. Globetrotter: Inglês para o ensino médio. Macmillan 2001. Page 41.

The text shows a reality where:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3382378 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: UFF
Orgão: DATAPREV

A seqüência a seguir está formada a partir de uma regra lógica.

2 4 6 10 16 ....

O próximo valor dessa seqüência é:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3382377 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Raciocínio Lógico
Banca: UFF
Orgão: DATAPREV

Das proposições indicadas nas opções, a única que pode ser considerada uma negação de “Todo brasileiro é religioso”, é:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3382376 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Matemática
Banca: UFF
Orgão: DATAPREV

Uma pessoa recebe seu salário e logo gasta ¼ do mesmo pagando o aluguel. Em seguida, gasta 1/3 do que restou fazendo compras e mais R$ 40,00 num restaurante, ficando ainda com R$ 280,00. O salário dessa pessoa, portanto, é:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3382375 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Física
Banca: UFF
Orgão: DATAPREV

Um ciclista, com a velocidade de 20 km/h percorre uma certa distância em 10 horas. Se fizesse essa mesma viagem com velocidade de 25 km/h, o percurso seria feito em:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3382374 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Matemática
Banca: UFF
Orgão: DATAPREV

Quatro casas estão em seqüência e do mesmo lado de uma rua. Para pintar essas casas dispõe-se de cinco cores distintas e existem as seguintes exigências:

\( \bullet \)Cada casa seja pintada com uma só cor;

\( \bullet \)Duas casas vizinhas sejam pintadas com cores diferentes;

O número de maneiras diferentes de se pintar essas casas, é:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas
3382373 Ano: 2009
Disciplina: Atualidades e Conhecimentos Gerais
Banca: UFF
Orgão: DATAPREV

Uma câmera digital capaz de gerar imagens 200 vezes maiores que as câmeras topo de linha disponíveis no mercado consumidor foi criada pelo MIT Lincoln Laboratory para vigiar o céu (...).

De acordo com o site InformationWeek, a câmera de 1,4 gigapixel (ou 1400 megapixels) entrará em ação em dezembro e fará parte de um protótipo de telescópio instalado emumobservatório na montanha Haleakala, no Havaí. Em entrevista ao MIT News, o astrônomo John Tonry, envolvido no projeto, explicou que o gigantesco instrumento será capaz de capturar imagens com resolução de 38 mil por 38 mil pixels, e quando o conjunto estiver pronto monitorará uma área seis vezes maior que a Lua, detectando estrelas dez milhões de vezes melhor do que pode ser feito a olho nu.

(http://br.noticias.yahoo.com/s/19112008/7/tecnologia-negocioscamera- 1-4-gigapixel.html)

Esta câmera digital pode ser útil para a humanidade por ajudar a defender a Terra:

 

Provas

Questão presente nas seguintes provas