Foram encontradas 40 questões.
Read the text below to answer question from.
The Secret Life of Passwords
By IAN URBINA
Howard Lutnick, the chief executive of Cantor Fitzgerald, one of the world’s largest financial-services firms, still cries when he talks about it. Not long after the planes struck the twin towers, killing 658 of his co-workers and friends, including his brother, one of the first things on Lutnick’s mind was passwords. This may seem callous, but it was not.
Like virtually everyone else caught up in the events that day, Lutnick, who had taken the morning off to escort his son, Kyle, to his first day of kindergarten, was in shock. But he was also the one person most responsible for ensuring the viability of his company. The biggest threat to that survival became apparent almost immediately: No one knew the passwords for hundreds of accounts and files that were needed to get back online in time for the reopening of the bond markets. Cantor Fitzgerald did have extensive contingency plans in place, including a requirement that all employees tell their work passwords to four nearby colleagues. But now a large majority of the firm’s 960 New York employees were dead. “We were thinking of a major fire,” Lutnick said. “No one in those days had ever thought of an entire four-to-six-block radius being destroyed.” The attacks also knocked out one of the company’s main backup servers, which were housed, at what until that day seemed like a safe distance away, under 2 World Trade Center.
Hours after the attacks, Microsoft dispatched more than security expert to an improvised Cantor Fitzgerald command center in Rochelle Park, N.J., roughly 20 miles from the rubble. Many of the missing passwords would prove to be relatively secure — the “JHx6fT!9” type that the company’s I.T. department implored everyone to choose. To crack those, the Microsoft technicians performed “brute force” attacks, using fast computers to begin with “a” then work through every possible letter and number combination before ending at “ZZZZZZZ.” But even with the fastest computers, brute-force attacks, working through trillions of 26 combinations, could take days. Wall Street was not going to wait.
Microsoft’s technicians, Lutnick recalled, knew that they needed to take advantage of two facts: Many people use the same password for multiple accounts, and these passwords are typically personalized. The technicians explained that for their algorithms to work best, they needed large amounts of trivia about the owner of each missing password, the kinds of things that were too specific, too personal and too idiosyncratic for companies to keep on file. “It’s the details that make people distinct, that make them individuals,” Lutnick said. He soon found himself on the phone, desperately trying to compartmentalize his own agony while calling the spouses, parents and siblings of his former colleagues to console them — and to ask them, ever so gently, whether they knew their loved ones’ passwords. Most often they did not, which meant that Lutnick had to begin working his way through a checklist that had been provided to him by the Microsoft technicians. “What is your wedding anniversary? Tell me again where he went for undergrad? You guys 40 have a dog, don’t you? What’s her name? You have two children. Can you give me their birth dates?"
“Remember, this was less than 24 hours after the towers had fallen,” he said. “The fire department was still referring to it as a search-and-rescue mission.” Families had not accepted their losses. Lutnick said he never referred to anyone as being dead, just “not available right now.” He framed his questions to be an affirmation of that person’s importance to the company, he said. Conversations oscillated between sudden bawling and agonizing silences. “Awful,” he said. Sometimes it took more than an hour to work through the checklist, but Lutnick said he made sure he was never the one to hang up first.
In the end, Microsoft’s technicians got what they needed. The firm was back in operation within two days. The same human sentimentality that made Cantor Fitzgerald’s passwords “weak,” ultimately proved to be its saving grace.
From:< http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/19/magazine/the-secret-life-of-passwords.html?hpw&rref=technology&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0> Accessed on December 11, 2014.
When trying to find out the passwords of the employees missing on the World Trade Center, Lutnick:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Match the columns with information corresponding to the principles of language assessment found in Brown and Abeywickrama (2010):
I. Practicality
II. Reliability
III. Validity
IV. Authenticity
V. Washback
II. Reliability
III. Validity
IV. Authenticity
V. Washback
( ) Feature of a test that gives clear directions for scoring, presents uniform rubrics and is consistent in its conditions across two or more administrators.
( ) Feature of a test that, when positive, gives learners information that enhances their language development, it influences how learners learn.
( ) Feature of a test that contains language as natural as possible, has contextualized items, meaningful, relevant, and interesting topics.
( ) Feature of a test that is feasible within the resources provided in terms of its administration, scoring, and material resources.
( ) Feature of a test that is supported by a theoretical rationale or argument, relying as much as possible on empirical evidence.
The correct sequence from top to bottom is
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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
The ONLY INCORRECT sentence below is:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
In Ellis (1997) there can be found a long discussion about Interlanguage. Taken into consideration the concepts of Interlanguage, as well as some language learning theories related to it, complete the excerpts below with the right title:
I. - The positive or negative influence that the mother language exerts over the acquisition of a second language.
II. - Results when learners fail to acculturate to the target- language group, when they are unable or unwilling to adapt to a new culture. The main reason for failing is social distance.
III. - A number of general strategies which children use to extract and segment linguistic information from the language they hear. Provide a simple and attractive way of accounting for the properties of interlanguage.
IV. - Language learning is like any other kind of learning in that it involves habit formation. It takes place when learners have the opportunity to practice making the correct response to a given stimulus.
V. - The human mind is equipped with a faculty for learning languages separate from the faculties responsible for other kinds of cognitive activity.
The right order for the titles is:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Read the text below to answer question from.
The Secret Life of Passwords
By IAN URBINA
Howard Lutnick, the chief executive of Cantor Fitzgerald, one of the world’s largest financial-services firms, still cries when he talks about it. Not long after the planes struck the twin towers, killing 658 of his co-workers and friends, including his brother, one of the first things on Lutnick’s mind was passwords. This may seem callous, but it was not.
Like virtually everyone else caught up in the events that day, Lutnick, who had taken the morning off to escort his son, Kyle, to his first day of kindergarten, was in shock. But he was also the one person most responsible for ensuring the viability of his company. The biggest threat to that survival became apparent almost immediately: No one knew the passwords for hundreds of accounts and files that were needed to get back online in time for the reopening of the bond markets. Cantor Fitzgerald did have extensive contingency plans in place, including a requirement that all employees tell their work passwords to four nearby colleagues. But now a large majority of the firm’s 960 New York employees were dead. “We were thinking of a major fire,” Lutnick said. “No one in those days had ever thought of an entire four-to-six-block radius being destroyed.” The attacks also knocked out one of the company’s main backup servers, which were housed, at what until that day seemed like a safe distance away, under 2 World Trade Center.
Hours after the attacks, Microsoft dispatched more than security expert to an improvised Cantor Fitzgerald command center in Rochelle Park, N.J., roughly 20 miles from the rubble. Many of the missing passwords would prove to be relatively secure — the “JHx6fT!9” type that the company’s I.T. department implored everyone to choose. To crack those, the Microsoft technicians performed “brute force” attacks, using fast computers to begin with “a” then work through every possible letter and number combination before ending at “ZZZZZZZ.” But even with the fastest computers, brute-force attacks, working through trillions of 26 combinations, could take days. Wall Street was not going to wait.
Microsoft’s technicians, Lutnick recalled, knew that they needed to take advantage of two facts: Many people use the same password for multiple accounts, and these passwords are typically personalized. The technicians explained that for their algorithms to work best, they needed large amounts of trivia about the owner of each missing password, the kinds of things that were too specific, too personal and too idiosyncratic for companies to keep on file. “It’s the details that make people distinct, that make them individuals,” Lutnick said. He soon found himself on the phone, desperately trying to compartmentalize his own agony while calling the spouses, parents and siblings of his former colleagues to console them — and to ask them, ever so gently, whether they knew their loved ones’ passwords. Most often they did not, which meant that Lutnick had to begin working his way through a checklist that had been provided to him by the Microsoft technicians. “What is your wedding anniversary? Tell me again where he went for undergrad? You guys 40 have a dog, don’t you? What’s her name? You have two children. Can you give me their birth dates?"
“Remember, this was less than 24 hours after the towers had fallen,” he said. “The fire department was still referring to it as a search-and-rescue mission.” Families had not accepted their losses. Lutnick said he never referred to anyone as being dead, just “not available right now.” He framed his questions to be an affirmation of that person’s importance to the company, he said. Conversations oscillated between sudden bawling and agonizing silences. “Awful,” he said. Sometimes it took more than an hour to work through the checklist, but Lutnick said he made sure he was never the one to hang up first.
In the end, Microsoft’s technicians got what they needed. The firm was back in operation within two days. The same human sentimentality that made Cantor Fitzgerald’s passwords “weak,” ultimately proved to be its saving grace.
From:< http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/19/magazine/the-secret-life-of-passwords.html?hpw&rref=technology&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0> Accessed on December 11, 2014.
Given the sentences below:
“We were thinking of a major fire,” Lutnick said
“Remember, this was less than 24 hours after the towers had fallen,” he said.
“Remember, this was less than 24 hours after the towers had fallen,” he said.
The correct form for the reported speech is:
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Leia o texto, a seguir, atentamente para responder à questão.
Um estranho poder de cura
Meu filho, deficiente mental, Hikari, foi despertado pela voz dos pássaros para a música de Bach e Mozart e acabou produzindo suas próprias obras. As pequenas(A) e (C)peças que ele inicialmente compôs eram cheias de frescor e prazer. Pareciam gotas de orvalho brilhando sobre a relva. A palavra inocência é composta do prefixo “in”, que significa “não”, e de “nocere”, “ferir”. Ou seja, ela quer dizer “aquele que não fere”. A música de Hikari era uma manifestação natural de sua própria inocência. Conforme ele passou a criar mais obras, no entanto, não pude deixar de ouvir nelas também a voz de uma alma escura e atormentada. Apesar de deficiente, seus esforços extenuantes permitiram que ele descobrisse do fundo de seu coração uma massa de tristeza que até então ele fora incapaz(D) de expressar com palavras(B). O fato de expressá-la em música cura Hikari de sua tristeza, é um ato de recuperação. Mais ainda, seus ouvintes aceitaram essa música como algo que também os fortalece e restaura. Nesses fenômenos, eu encontro as razões para acreditar no estranho poder curativo da arte.
Trecho do discurso de aceitação do Prêmio Nobel de
Kenzaburo Oe. Disponível em: <http://veja.abril.com.br/050303/p_100.html>. Acesso em: 02 dez. 2014.
Carone (1995) aborda em seu livro Morfossintaxe termos como morfema e vocábulo.
A partir deles, é INCORRETO afirmar que
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Read the text below to answer question from.
The Secret Life of Passwords
By IAN URBINA
Howard Lutnick, the chief executive of Cantor Fitzgerald, one of the world’s largest financial-services firms, still cries when he talks about it. Not long after the planes struck the twin towers, killing 658 of his co-workers and friends, including his brother, one of the first things on Lutnick’s mind was passwords. This may seem callous, but it was not.
Like virtually everyone else caught up in the events that day, Lutnick, who had taken the morning off to escort his son, Kyle, to his first day of kindergarten, was in shock. But he was also the one person most responsible for ensuring the viability of his company. The biggest threat to that survival became apparent almost immediately: No one knew the passwords for hundreds of accounts and files that were needed to get back online in time for the reopening of the bond markets. Cantor Fitzgerald did have extensive contingency plans in place, including a requirement that all employees tell their work passwords to four nearby colleagues. But now a large majority of the firm’s 960 New York employees were dead. “We were thinking of a major fire,” Lutnick said. “No one in those days had ever thought of an entire four-to-six-block radius being destroyed.” The attacks also knocked out one of the company’s main backup servers, which were housed, at what until that day seemed like a safe distance away, under 2 World Trade Center.
Hours after the attacks, Microsoft dispatched more than security expert to an improvised Cantor Fitzgerald command center in Rochelle Park, N.J., roughly 20 miles from the rubble. Many of the missing passwords would prove to be relatively secure — the “JHx6fT!9” type that the company’s I.T. department implored everyone to choose. To crack those, the Microsoft technicians performed “brute force” attacks, using fast computers to begin with “a” then work through every possible letter and number combination before ending at “ZZZZZZZ.” But even with the fastest computers, brute-force attacks, working through trillions of 26 combinations, could take days. Wall Street was not going to wait.
Microsoft’s technicians, Lutnick recalled, knew that they needed to take advantage of two facts: Many people use the same password for multiple accounts, and these passwords are typically personalized. The technicians explained that for their algorithms to work best, they needed large amounts of trivia about the owner of each missing password, the kinds of things that were too specific, too personal and too idiosyncratic for companies to keep on file. “It’s the details that make people distinct, that make them individuals,” Lutnick said. He soon found himself on the phone, desperately trying to compartmentalize his own agony while calling the spouses, parents and siblings of his former colleagues to console them — and to ask them, ever so gently, whether they knew their loved ones’ passwords. Most often they did not, which meant that Lutnick had to begin working his way through a checklist that had been provided to him by the Microsoft technicians. “What is your wedding anniversary? Tell me again where he went for undergrad? You guys 40 have a dog, don’t you? What’s her name? You have two children. Can you give me their birth dates?"
“Remember, this was less than 24 hours after the towers had fallen,” he said. “The fire department was still referring to it as a search-and-rescue mission.” Families had not accepted their losses. Lutnick said he never referred to anyone as being dead, just “not available right now.” He framed his questions to be an affirmation of that person’s importance to the company, he said. Conversations oscillated between sudden bawling and agonizing silences. “Awful,” he said. Sometimes it took more than an hour to work through the checklist, but Lutnick said he made sure he was never the one to hang up first.
In the end, Microsoft’s technicians got what they needed. The firm was back in operation within two days. The same human sentimentality that made Cantor Fitzgerald’s passwords “weak,” ultimately proved to be its saving grace.
From:< http://www.nytimes.com/2014/11/19/magazine/the-secret-life-of-passwords.html?hpw&rref=technology&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&module=well-region®ion=bottom-well&WT.nav=bottom-well&_r=0> Accessed on December 11, 2014.
Which of the alternatives below best replaces bond markets in line 11?
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Given the sentences:
I. I may not be much of a cook, but Lucy is even in the kitchen than I am.
II. Curiously, many people say they feel mentally if they eat very little for a day.
III. Of my three cousins, Patrick is the . He’s pretty fast.
IV. Gloves and scarves are the accessories in the summer days.
II. Curiously, many people say they feel mentally if they eat very little for a day.
III. Of my three cousins, Patrick is the . He’s pretty fast.
IV. Gloves and scarves are the accessories in the summer days.
Which option best completes the sentences below?
Provas
Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Para responder à questão 14, tome como base as charges 1 e 2.

Disponível em: <http://edinanarede.webnode.com.br/atividades/>. Acesso em: 28 nov. 2014.

Disponível em:<http://edinanarede.webnode.com.br/atividades/>. Acesso em: 28 nov. 2014.
As charges podem ser relacionadas a um fato histórico do Brasil, representativo de um importante momento para a Literatura Brasileira. Considerando as charges, é correto afirmar que
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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
The audio-lingual method became very famous for being used in training programs for government personnel in the United States. It has strong theoretical basis in linguistics and psychology.
According to Larsen-Freeman (2000), it is possible to affirm that:
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Questão presente nas seguintes provas
Cadernos
Caderno Container