A) It did not include software or hardware devices to detect and report overdoses.
B) It did not tell other hospitals about possible overdose incidents.
C) It reused code without proper testing.
D) It continued to sell the Therac-25 after the FDA declared it to be defective.
E) AECL made all of these mistakes, and more.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) artificial intelligence.
B) computer engineering.
C) computer science.
D) software simulation.
E) software engineering.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the U.S. Secret Service arrested the culprits before they could do any further damage.
B) AT&T technicians rapidly fixed the software bug in the routing switches.
C) MCI loaned some equipment to AT&T.
D) the faulty computers shut themselves off before they could do any further damage.
E) not all the routing switches had been converted to the latest software.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) a faulty on-board computer caused the other computers in the network to crash repeatedly.
B) a bad sensor fed faulty information into the flight control computer, causing it to fail.
C) the rocket's on-board computer sent back faulty information to ground control, causing the human controllers to destroy the rocket.
D) code that worked correctly on the Ariane 4 failed on the Ariane 5.
E) a software failure caused the rocket to self-destruct when in actuality the rocket's flight was going perfectly.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) hackers broke into its trading system and raided the accounts of 10,000 of its most important customers.
B) a bug in its billing system caused it to send out improper invoices to 10,000 of its most important customers.
C) a bug in its currency trading system caused it to sell yen and purchase dollars when it should have purchased yen and sold dollars.
D) it tried unsuccessfully to automate the Tokyo Stock Exchange.
E) one of its employees mistyped a sell order, and a bug in the Tokyo Stock Exchange trading program made it impossible to cancel the order.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) was designed to shoot down airplanes.
B) failed to shoot down a Scud missile that killed 28 U.S. soldiers in the Gulf War.
C) failed because it had been left running too long.
D) failed because of a computer error.
E) All of the above
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) reduce costs by replacing hardware safety features with software safety features.
B) increase the stock price of its subsidiary Digital Equipment Corporation.
C) shrink the size of the machine considerably.
D) eliminate the need for lead shielding.
E) All of the above
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The system misrouted luggage carts.
B) A key customer, United Airlines, kept changing the specifications of the system.
C) The bar code printers didn't print tags clearly enough to be read by the scanners.
D) Workers painted over electric eyes installed in the underground tunnels.
E) The automated baggage handlers shredded some of the luggage.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The NCIC databases contain about 40 million records.
B) Improper use of the NCIC has led to about 1 million false arrests.
C) Local law enforcement agencies enter 99 percent of the information that is in the NCIC databases.
D) The Department of Homeland Security is in charge of the NCIC.
E) All of these statements are true.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) there is no evidence that there have been any problems with punched card systems.
B) they are made in China, which does not even hold elections.
C) a power failure could make it impossible for people to vote.
D) they do not have a paper audit trail.
E) All of the above
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) A self-driving Uber ran a red light.
B) Two self-driving Ubers collided with each other.
C) A self-driving Uber hit and killed a pedestrian.
D) Uber removed all of its safety operators from its self-driving cars.
E) All of the above
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) the null hypothesis.
B) software engineering.
C) synthesis.
D) validation.
E) verification.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) distributed computers.
B) event-driven simulations.
C) pseudo-sensory systems.
D) real-time systems.
E) time-activated systems.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) The "autopilot" feature was engaged.
B) The Tesla was speeding.
C) Foggy conditions made visibility poor.
D) Brown did not have his hands on the steering wheel.
E) Autopilot's radar mistook the tractor trailer for an overhead sign.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) an embedded system.
B) a mainframe computer.
C) a network.
D) an operating system.
E) a personal computer .
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) one program output thrust in terms of foot-pounds, and another program expected thrust to be expressed in terms of newtons.
B) the probe lost contact with the Jet Propulsion Laboratory when it entered the Martian atmosphere.
C) a bug in the computer program caused the vehicle to consume too much fuel on the way to Mars, leaving an inadequate supply for landing.
D) the extreme cold of deep space caused the computer to crash.
E) before programmers went on strike at subcontractor Lockheed Martin, one of them sabotaged the flight control software.
Correct Answer
verified
Multiple Choice
A) a false negative.
B) a false positive.
C) the "boy cries wolf" phenomenon.
D) having a "hair trigger" predisposition.
E) None of the above
Correct Answer
verified
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