信用风险管理不应当仅仅停留在单笔贷款的层面上,还应当从贷款组合的层面进行识别、计量、

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问题:

信用风险管理不应当仅仅停留在单笔贷款的层面上,还应当从贷款组合的层面进行识别、计量、监测和控制。 ( )

考点:银行业从业考试风险管理银行业从业人员资格考试风险管理
题型:判断题

一个长方体,它的棱长总和是36厘米,宽和高分别是2厘米和1厘米.这个长方体的表面积是______平方厘米.

题型:判断题

电动自行车的一块电瓶标称电动势为12V,但用久以后性能会下降,表现之一为电瓶的电动势变小,内阻变大.某兴趣小组将某电动自行车的一块旧电瓶充满电后测量它的电动势和内阻.现有下列器材可用:

电流表A,量程0~600mA,内阻约2Ω

电流表G,量程0~500μA,内阻

Rg
=200Ω

电压表V,量程0~3V,内阻约5kΩ

定值电阻

R1
=19800Ω

定值电阻

R2
=9800Ω

滑动变阻器

R3
,0~100Ω,1A

滑动变阻器

R4
,0~1000Ω,1A

开关一只,导线若干

待测电瓶E

(1)请选择合适的器材在下边线框中画出实验电路图(器材必须标明符号).

(2)兴趣小组记录了实验数据,并通过计算得到了6组电压U和对应电流I的值,如表所示.请你帮助他们作出U-I图象.

电压U/V9.809.308.707.807.136.42
电流I/A0.140.190.260.350.430.50
(3)由图象可得这块旧电瓶的电动势为______V,内阻为______Ω.

题型:判断题

火场通信的主要任务是:负责火场指挥部与前沿阵地,火场指挥部与调度指挥中心之间的()联络。

(A)通信 

(B)指挥 

(C)战斗 

(D)火场

题型:判断题

放射性核素检查()。

A.对骨组织显示较清晰,可确定肿块大小、形状、位置及与周围组织的关系

B.对与血管有关的颈部肿块有重要的诊断意义

C.对甲状腺疾病有重要的诊断意义

D.对软组织的分辨率较高,不用血管造影剂即可诊断颈动脉瘤,血管畸形

E.通过声像图诊断颈部疾病

题型:判断题

Crash-Prone The Solution Could Be Windows XP;
But does It Make Sense to Upgrade Your Operating System


You can hardly turn on the television or click on a Web page without seeing a colorful ad for Microsoft’s new Windows XP operating system, which launched on Oct. 25.
So, now that the long-awaited XP is here, what are you going to do about it Should you upgrade, and if you do, how hard is it and what are the potential drawbacks The decision is pretty easy if you really need a whole new Windows PC. They all come with XP preloaded, and in my tests of a few such models, they seemed to work well. I’m writing this on my own new personal computer, a Dell that came preloaded with Windows XP, and it worked great right out of the box.
The only downside is that if you’re keeping older printers, scanners and other peripherals, you may have to download new "drivers" — the small programs that allow a PC and a peripheral to interact. XP contains many of the drivers for recent-model printers and the like, sparing you from even digging out the disks that came with them. But if you have older equipment, you may have to download new drivers, because the original software that came with the hardware might not work with Windows XP.
It’s harder to decide what to do about XP if you have a PC that doesn’t need replacing. If you’re happy with the way things are working, don’t upgrade. It’s never a trivial thing to change operating systems, and you shouldn’t do it without a reason.
However, there are two big limitations in prior versions of Windows that XP does fix, and that might make an upgrade worthwhile. These are stability — that is, the ability not to crash, or at least to do so rarely — and compatibility. Windows 98 and Windows ME, the previous consumer versions, had wide compatibility with consumer software and peripherals, but lousy stability. Windows 2000, the prior business version, had great stability, but limited compatibility with consumer software and add-on hardware.
Windows XP is designed to combine the stability of Windows 2000 (with which it shares underlying code) with the compatibility of Windows 98 and Windows ME, and in my experience, it does a good job at that. So if you need more reliability or compatibility than your current version of Windows supplies, an upgrade may be in order.
But there’s a catch. Microsoft says that an XP upgrade will really be sensible only if your PC is two years old or less — built after 1999. And you need at least a 300MHz processor and 128 megabytes of memory, though I recommend at least 192MB, and 256MB is even better. Also, you’ll need a roomy hard disk — Windows XP alone will suck up 1.5 gigabytes.
So there are only a limited number of PCs for which upgrading makes sense, and you may have to invest in beefing yours up first.
Not only that, but you must have Windows 98, Windows ME or Windows 2000 on your current system to upgrade. If you have Windows 95 and somehow still have a new enough machine to qualify, you have to buy a very expensive, "full" version of Windows XP, basically wipe out your whole hard disk and start from scratch with XP, losing all your installed programs and settings.
If you’re good to go, you next have to decide which upgrade version of XP is right for you — the $99 Home Edition or the $199 Professional. The differences between them are surprisingly small, and 95 percent of home and small-business users will be fine with the home version. Buy the pro version only if you are running more than a modest network or need special security features.
Note that if you have Windows 2000, or NT 4.0, you can upgrade only to Windows XP Professional, not the Home Edition. If you have Windows 98 or ME, you can choose either flavor of XP.
In my tests, which included five PCs running all the main older versions; the Windows XP upgrades, both home and pro, went very smoothly.
The process took about an hour in each case, and the installation software was friendly and clear in its instructions and progress reports.

Microsoft recommends an XP upgrade for ______.
A. all personal computers without XP
B. PCs built within the past two years
C. old personal computers
D. PCs which often crash

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