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2691747 Ano: 2023
Disciplina: Inglês (Língua Inglesa)
Banca: UFRRJ
Orgão: UFRRJ
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Leia o texto II e responda às questões de 18 a 20.

TEXTO II

AMBIENT SOUND TO PLANT FINDER APPS: WHAT HIDDEN FEATURES

DOES MY PHONE HAVE?

Jennifer Jolly Special to USA TODAY. Published 5:35p.m. ET Jan. 24,2023 | Updated 12:25 p.m. ET Jan. 26, 2023

Smartphones are the obvious must-have tech gadget in 2023. More than 85% of us have one. We use it for several hours a day for just about everything from texting, talking, and taking photos or videos — to shopping, working, social media-ing, and so much more.

Still, are we getting the most out of our magical little do-everything devices? Probably not.

Gadget-makers add handy new tricks all the time. For instance, did you know that many smartphones now come with a built-in white noise machine? I didn’t, until I happened upon the feature buried in my accessibility settings a few days ago.

Take a look at that little bit of genius, plus a handful of other fun and useful tips to help you save time, money, and sanity. [...]

How can I use my phone to identify a plant?

Use your camera or photos to identify plants, landmarks, wine, and more.

Just last year, I paid a pretty penny to identify plants in my own backyard with a special app. Now, my phone does it for free.

For iPhones, this feature’s called Visual Look Up. For Androids, you can keep using Google Lens.

On an iPhone: Go to your Camera app, snap the photo, then look for the small "i" icon at the bottom, in the middle of a circle. As long as it has two small stars at its top-left corner, you’re in luck. Visual Look Up information is available for that photo.

You can also go back through your Photo app and find this on an older photo. You're good to go as long as the small “i” icon with the two stars is there.

Swipe up on the photo or tap that icon to see more of what the AI “sees” in the photo.

Either tap Look Up in the middle of your screen or tap that little “pin” icon to see what Siri can figure out about it.

Usually, it takes you to a Wikipedia page and shows other similar photos.

On most Androids: I usually use Google Lens for this as well. Bixby Vision is easy for Samsung devices too — and it’s all super similar to how it works for iPhones.

Open the Google Lens Camera app, tap the shutter button, and it automatically searches.

If you’re looking through a photo or video you already took — tap that photo and tap the little eye icon for Bixby Vision.

Adaptado de: https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2023/01/24/hidden-smartphone-features-iphone-android/11113779002/ Acesso em 26.01.2023

Na sentença: “Now, my phone does it for free.”, o pronome “it” se refere à palavra

 

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