Esta é uma página do aluno José Antonio, da Uniara (Centro Universitário de Araraquara)
Mostrando postagens com marcador skimming. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador skimming. Mostrar todas as postagens
sexta-feira, 5 de agosto de 2011
Skimming: From a 1989 magazine
Tente dizer, apenas pelos elementos em destaque, do que se trata o texto acima. Depois, clique na figura para poder lê-lo e conferir o resultado.
sábado, 23 de julho de 2011
Skimming: Heat Wave
Severe thunderstorms in the eastern United States caused a number of flight cancellations but airports returned to normal Wednesday morning, officials said.
The bad weather forced several hundred passengers to spend the night sleeping in chairs or on the floor at Charlotte/Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer reported.
At Ohio's Akron-Canton airport the storms dumped 4.73 inches of rain in a three-hour period, the most precipitation since 1948, the Akron (Ohio) Beacon-Journal reported.
The return of calm weather will have no effect on temperatures which are expected to top the 100-degree mark in New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. by week's end, forecasters said.
"It's the hottest weather these cities have had since last July," said senior
meteorologist Henry Margusity of AccuWeather.com.
The sweltering heat wave smothering a large part of the United States saw the mercury in at least 17 states hitting the 100-degree mark Tuesday and more than 40 surpassing 90 degrees, AccuWeather.com reported.
High humidity accompanying the heat is making it feel a lot warmer than the
thermometer indicates, Bernie Rayno, senior meteorologist, said. "It's like getting slapped in the face with a wet sponge when you walk outside."
The major player in this week's heat wave is the position of the jet stream, an area of maximum winds high above the ground.
A big bubble of hot air in the jet stream is currently located over the central United States and has been sending temperatures soaring above 100 degrees from Texas to Montana and the Dakotas.
The dangerous heat wave is expected to continue across much of the central United States and into the east, the National Weather Service reported.
Temperatures above 100 degrees were recorded Tuesday in parts of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Ohio, Oklahoma, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin.
Texto extraído do portal de notícias UPI.com
Tente dizer, apenas pelos elementos em destaque, do que se trata o texto acima. Depois, selecione o texto completo para poder lê-lo e conferir o resultado.
The bad weather forced several hundred passengers to spend the night sleeping in chairs or on the floor at Charlotte/Douglas International Airport in North Carolina, the Charlotte (N.C.) Observer reported.
At Ohio's Akron-Canton airport the storms dumped 4.73 inches of rain in a three-hour period, the most precipitation since 1948, the Akron (Ohio) Beacon-Journal reported.
The return of calm weather will have no effect on temperatures which are expected to top the 100-degree mark in New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C. by week's end, forecasters said.
"It's the hottest weather these cities have had since last July," said senior
meteorologist Henry Margusity of AccuWeather.com.
The sweltering heat wave smothering a large part of the United States saw the mercury in at least 17 states hitting the 100-degree mark Tuesday and more than 40 surpassing 90 degrees, AccuWeather.com reported.
High humidity accompanying the heat is making it feel a lot warmer than the
thermometer indicates, Bernie Rayno, senior meteorologist, said. "It's like getting slapped in the face with a wet sponge when you walk outside."
The major player in this week's heat wave is the position of the jet stream, an area of maximum winds high above the ground.
A big bubble of hot air in the jet stream is currently located over the central United States and has been sending temperatures soaring above 100 degrees from Texas to Montana and the Dakotas.
The dangerous heat wave is expected to continue across much of the central United States and into the east, the National Weather Service reported.
Temperatures above 100 degrees were recorded Tuesday in parts of Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana, Ohio, Oklahoma, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, and Wisconsin.
Texto extraído do portal de notícias UPI.com
Tente dizer, apenas pelos elementos em destaque, do que se trata o texto acima. Depois, selecione o texto completo para poder lê-lo e conferir o resultado.
sexta-feira, 10 de junho de 2011
Skimming: Frontpage
Microsoft got its money's worth when it paid a reported $100 million for Vermeer Technologies, the company that wrote the first version of FrontPage. Webmasters who pay $149 ($109 if yu own Microsoft Office) for Version 1.1 of this dazzling package will also get their money's worth when they use it to build high-powerred, high-tech Web sites without writing a line of HTML code.
FrontPage, a 32-bit program that run on Windows 95 or Windows NT, almost effortlessly builds forms, tables, image maps, frames, and search engines into your Web pages and makes it just as easy to create ordinary links, images, and text.
Instalation is a straighforward matter of following the prompts. About 10MB of your disk is devoted to FrontPage's editing software and template and sample files, and to Personal Web Server, which lets a standalone machine act like an http server. Personal Web Server lets FrontPage navigate the sites you create in the same way a browser navigates remote sites.
FrontPage's editing software comprises two interlinked components: Explorer, which creates and manages full Web sites, and Editor, in which you create pages and links. Explorer displays a site's organization in two panes: a hierarchical outline view and a link view that displays the links to and from individual pages in a wheel-and-spoke format. When you click on a page in either view, the page opens in Editor.
Tente dizer, apenas pelos elementos em destaque, do que se trata o texto acima. Depois, selecione o texto completo para poder lê-lo e conferir o resultado.
FrontPage, a 32-bit program that run on Windows 95 or Windows NT, almost effortlessly builds forms, tables, image maps, frames, and search engines into your Web pages and makes it just as easy to create ordinary links, images, and text.
Instalation is a straighforward matter of following the prompts. About 10MB of your disk is devoted to FrontPage's editing software and template and sample files, and to Personal Web Server, which lets a standalone machine act like an http server. Personal Web Server lets FrontPage navigate the sites you create in the same way a browser navigates remote sites.
FrontPage's editing software comprises two interlinked components: Explorer, which creates and manages full Web sites, and Editor, in which you create pages and links. Explorer displays a site's organization in two panes: a hierarchical outline view and a link view that displays the links to and from individual pages in a wheel-and-spoke format. When you click on a page in either view, the page opens in Editor.
PC Magazine – September 10, 1996
Tente dizer, apenas pelos elementos em destaque, do que se trata o texto acima. Depois, selecione o texto completo para poder lê-lo e conferir o resultado.
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