Questions
Date Debit Card and Credit Card Cash Sale Deposited cash in Bank 15/9/2020 $2,956.00 0 16/9/2020...

Date

Debit Card and Credit Card

Cash Sale

Deposited cash in Bank

15/9/2020

$2,956.00

0

16/9/2020

$1,848.00

$477.50

17/9/2020

17/9/2020

$3,240.00

$350.50

18/9/2020

18/9/2020

$1,259.50

0

19/9/2020

$1,729.50

0

20/9/2020

$1,404.50

0

22/9/2020

$2,327.00

$140.50

23/9/2020

23/9/2020

$3,140.50

$330.50

24/9/2020

24/9/2020

$2,890.00

0

25/9/2020

$1,448.00

0

26/9/2020

$3,240.00

$347.00

28/9/2020

27/9/2020

$1,269.50

$332.00

28/9/2020

29/9/2020

$1,829.50

0

30/9/2020

$3,104.50

$277.00

Not yet deposited

Credit Card Transactions:

From

Payee

10/9/2020

Dandenong City Council

Council Rates

$880.00

15/9/2020

India Bazar

Rice, Wheat, Pulse and Spices

$770.50

15/9/2020

Cookers

Oil  

$491.00

15/9/2020

AAMI

Work Cover Insurance

$900.00

15/9/2020

House

Kitchen Supplies  

$425.00

15/9/2020

House

Uniform

$550.00

15/9/2020

Bunnings

Cleaning Supplies

$429.00

16/9/2020

Eastern Butcher

Meats

$2,250.90

16/9/2020

Farm Fresh

Vegetables

$595.00

16/9/2020

Kou Her

Herbs   

$70.00

16/9/2020

British Petroleum

Ice

$10.00

16/9/2020

Coles

Groceries

$192.00

16/9/2020

Office Works

Stationary

$99.00

22/9/2020

India Bazar

Rice, Wheat, Pulse and Spices

$770.50

22/9/2020

JJ Richards

Waste Removal

$110.00

23/9/2020

Cookers

Oil

$521.00

24/9/2020

Coles

Groceries

$210.00

25/9/2020

Maintenance of Hood

Blue Repairs

$220.00

26/9/2020

India Bazar

Rice, Wheat, Pulse and Spices

$660.50

26/9/2020

Coles Express

Fuel

$75.20

27/9/2020

Eastern Meats

Meats

$2,550.90

27/9/2020

Farm Fresh

Vegetables

$610.00

29/9/2020

Kou Her

Herbs

$70.00

September26: Credit card payment $9,000.

September28: Paid net wages to 4 employees @$1082 each after withholding tax of @$118 per employee. Guaranteed super is 9.5% on gross salary. You will mention the name of each employed as a payee.

September 28: Received Electricity bill $231 including GST. The bill is not yet paid.

September 30: Bank charged account fees $10.        

  1. Prepare Profit and Loss Statement for the month ended on 30th September2020 and Balance Sheet at 30th September2020.

In: Accounting

Brainstorm a new type of health care technology that you believe would contribute to the health...

Brainstorm a new type of health care technology that you believe would contribute to the health management information systems (HMIS) evolution. This technological advancement should either not yet exist or should serve to enhance existing technology to achieve an entirely new objective. What health care problems or challenges have you noticed for which there is not yet a solution? It is essential for health care administrators to be aware of the rapidly evolving and ever-changing field of health technology, both in terms of current as well as upcoming informational and system advancements. Assume that you are a health care administrator for an organization and you have been tasked with presenting this new technology to your organization's key stakeholders. After selecting your topic for this assignment, compose a 750-1,000-word proposal that addresses the following:

  1. Describe your new HMIS technology and what purpose it will serve. Who will most benefit from it? What gap will it fill in the health care technology field? How will this technology improve the quality of health care that clinicians can offer?
  2. What are the potential advantages and disadvantages of this HMIS technology for the consumer? In this case, the consumer is both the health care organization and the individual user or patient.
  3. How will the use and integration of this technology impact digital equity in the HMIS field?
  4. How will this technology collect, read, and interpret health data? Why and how will this data be useful to the health care organization?
  5. From an administrative perspective, describe when, how, and where you propose this technology first be introduced, and discuss how you foresee it impacting the organization.

The purpose of this assignment is to brainstorm a new type of health care technology that might contribute to the HMIS evolution.

The Internet is completely revolutionizing the way technology can be used in health care. Health care information is becoming more widely accessible through a range of telehealth options, and consumers are now far more computer savvy than at any time in the past. Individuals can use the Internet to research symptoms or diseases, as well as possible treatment plans, and seek out medical professionals or advice.

Technological advancements are also helping individuals to be more tuned in to their own bodies and aware of their individual health patterns and activities. Smartwatches and other wearable fitness trackers can track heart rate, movement and activity, and sleep cycles, while smartphones enable users to manage caloric intake, monitor diabetes, and even perform health services remotely, such as measuring blood pressure or conducting ultrasounds.

For this assignment, brainstorm a new type of health care technology that you believe would contribute to the health management information systems (HMIS) evolution. This technological advancement should either not yet exist or should serve to enhance an existing technology to achieve an entirely new objective. What health care problems or challenges have you noticed for which there is not yet a solution?

It is essential for health care administrators to be aware of the rapidly evolving and ever-changing field of health technology, both in terms of current as well as upcoming informational and system advancements. Assume that you are a health care administrator for an organization and you have been tasked with presenting this new technology to your organization's key stakeholders. After selecting your topic for this assignment, compose a 750-1,000-word proposal that addresses the following:


Describe your new HMIS technology and what purpose it will serve. Who will most benefit from it? What gap will it fill in the health care technology field? How will this technology improve the quality of health care that clinicians can offer?


What are the potential advantages and disadvantages of this HMIS technology for the consumer? In this case, the consumer is both the health care organization and the individual user or patient.


How will the use and integration of this technology impact digital equity in the HMIS field?


How will this technology collect, read, and interpret health data? Why and how will this data be useful to the health care organization?


From an administrative perspective, describe when, how, and where you propose this technology first be introduced, and discuss how you foresee it impacting the organization


In: Nursing

Is humankind dangerously harming the environment? Many key industries are dominated by a handful of large...

Is humankind dangerously harming the environment?

Many key industries are dominated by a handful of large firms. This tendency has been increasingly evident in recent years, as many separate firms have merged into larger ones. How might this trend affect technological innovation? Could it pose a threat to the overall development of the economy?

In: Economics

Is humankind dangerously harming the environment? Many key industries are dominated by a handful of large...

Is humankind dangerously harming the environment?

Many key industries are dominated by a handful of large firms. This tendency has been increasingly evident in recent years, as many separate firms have merged into larger ones. How might this trend affect technological innovation? Could it pose a threat to the overall development of the economy?

In: Economics

What are the steps to encouraging healthcare leaders to be more open to disruptive innovation that...

What are the steps to encouraging healthcare leaders to be more open to disruptive innovation that may threaten the status quo but will ultimately enhance the quality of health care for the majority of the population?

What problems do you predict with personalized medicine? How have you seen your health systems utilize personalized medicine?

In: Nursing

Are well-established firms or new entrants more likely to a) develop and/or b) adopt new technologies?...

Are well-established firms or new entrants more likely to a) develop and/or b) adopt new technologies? What are some reasons for your choice?

PLEASE ANSWER IN WORD FORMAT ONLY. NO PICTURES. PLEASE ANSWER IN 350 WORDS.

Dont copy paste from website.

Thanks

Subject: Management of Technological Innovation

In: Operations Management

You find yourself on planet Coraciidae where the indigenous creatures are smart, logical, and quite conveniently,...

You find yourself on planet Coraciidae where the indigenous creatures are smart, logical, and quite conveniently, speak English. However, after asking a few questions, you realize that they have no computers or advanced technology of any kind. You reach into your pocket to show them your cellphone, sure that they will be amazed, but realize, to your horror, that your battery is dead and you have no charger. You’re on your own here with no computer, no phone, no technology whatsoever. You’d better make yourself comfortable and useful, it seems like you might be stuck here for a while. On one of the first days on the planet, you meet Ektuz, a scientist who explains that he is trying to convince his peers that he’s discovered an odor that can be used to attract cockroaches (apparently cockroaches bring good luck on this planet). The apparatus he’s built to test his belief is quite simple: The scientist explains that he randomly chooses two of the six arms of the maze and puts a small drop of the attractant smell in those two arms. The other four arms he leaves empty. He then releases a roach in the center of the maze and records whether the roach walks down one of the legs that has the attractant odor in it, or if it chooses a leg that is empty. He says that he has repeated this process with 110 roaches and that 49 of the 110 roaches chose a leg that did have the odor he was testing. That’s better than chance, so he thinks this evidence supports his claims. Sadly, he explains that his colleagues dismiss his results as just the random behavior of the insect, since most of the roaches still wandered down the legs that did not have the odor in them. Fully explain how you would help your new friend Ektuz run a statistical test to see if his data supports the claim that the odor is attracting roaches. You don’t have access to a computer, phone, or calculator, so you won’t be able to provide an exact probability in your answer, but you need to present a step-by-step process for arriving at the answer and explain why you are performing each step. Your process/description needs to be rigorous enough to convince the skeptics (who are quite bright and will listen to reason). It might take a while to run the test, but Ektuz is willing to work on it for weeks if it will convince his colleagues. Remember, you don't have access to a computer or any other technology, but Ektuz’s lab is right next door to a casino, so you have unlimited access to coins, decks of cards, and dice, all of which are exactly like the stuff we have back on earth, and which may prove helpful for this project.

In: Statistics and Probability

Bonita Ranch & Farm is a distributor of ranch and farm equipment. Its products include small...

Bonita Ranch & Farm is a distributor of ranch and farm equipment. Its products include small tools, power equipment for trench-digging and fencing, grain dryers, and barn winches. Most products are sold direct via its company Internet site. However, given some of its specialty products, select farm implement stores carry Bonita’s products. Pricing and cost information on three of Bonita’s most popular products are as follows.

Item Stand-Alone Selling Price (Cost)
Mini-trencher $3,900 ($2,200)
Power fence hole auger 1,320 ($880)
Grain/hay dryer 15,470 ($12,100)


Respond to the requirements related to the following independent revenue arrangements for Bonita Ranch & Farm. IFRS is a constraint.

1. On January 1, 2020, Bonita sells augers to Mills Farm & Fleet for $52,800. Mills signs a six-month note at an annual interest rate of 12%. Bonita allows Mills to return any auger that it cannot use within 60 days and receive a full refund. Based on prior experience, Bonita estimates that 5% of units sold to customers like Mills will be returned (using the most likely outcome approach). Bonita’s costs to recover the products will be immaterial, and the returned augers are expected to be resold at a profit. Prepare the journal entries for Bonita on January 1, 2020.

2.On August 10, 2020, Bonita sells 17 mini-trenchers to a farm co-op in western Canada. Bonita provides a 4% volume discount on the mini-trenchers if the co-op has a 15% increase in purchases from Bonita compared with the prior year. Given the slowdown in the farm economy, sales to the co-op have been flat, and it is highly uncertain that the benchmark will be met.

3. Bonita sells three grain/hay dryers to a local farmer at a total contract price of $50,000. In addition to the dryers, Bonita provides installation, which has a stand-alone sales value of $1,020 per unit installed. The contract payment also includes a $1,530 maintenance plan for the dryers for three years after installation. Bonita signs the contract on June 20, 2020, and receives a 20% down payment from the farmer. The dryers are delivered and installed on October 1, 2020, and full payment is made to Bonita.

Prepare the journal entries for Bonita in 2020 related to this arrangement as well as any adjusting journal entries at its December year end

4. On April 25, 2020, Bonita ships 110 augers to Farm Depot, a farm supply dealer in Alberta, on consignment. By June 30, 2020, Farm Depot has sold 70 of the consigned augers at the listed price of $1,320 per unit. Farm Depot notifies Bonita of the sales, retains a 8% commission, and remits the cash due to Bonita.

Prepare the journal entries for Bonita and Farm Depot for the consignment arrangement

In: Accounting

n this chapter, we have noted how businesses are dynamic and constantly looking to exploit new...

n this chapter, we have noted how businesses are dynamic and constantly looking to exploit new opportunities that involve changing the way they operate production. What might not have been a success for some firms does not mean to say that there are no other firms that will be able to benefit. This article shows how problems faced by one firm in making sufficient profits are not necessarily shared by other firms as the use of factor inputs is changed.    

Best Buy Fails to Break UK Market.

US electrical retailer, Best Buy, made an attempt to enter the UK electrical retail market in 2010. The retailer is known across the united states for its high-quality sales staff and discount prices and attempted to bring its business model to the crowded UK market which features the likes of Currys, Argos, Dixons, and Comet.

The plans to enter the UK market arose when Best Buy Inc. brought half of the Carphone Warehouse's retail interests. Plans were made to open up to 200 so-called 'Big-Box' stores throughout the UK within the first one opening in Thurrock, Essex in April 2010. However, facing strong competition a lack of brand recognition by UK consumers, and the rapid growth of online retailing from firms like Amazon, Best Buy found things difficult and by January 2012 a decision was made to close down its 11bricks and mortar retail operations following losses of around 62 million pounds.

The decision to close down was made after consideration was given to commit more capital to its operations in an attempt to secure the advantages of large-scale production - economies of scale. In the end, the cost of such an investment in relation to the expected benefits in a market which was challenging (given the economic situation in the UK, the income elasticity of demand for electrical goods in general, and the increasing use of online as the medium of choice for shoppers), meant that option was discounted.

The decision to close down operations will have been takin in the light of the expected costs of trying to maintain its presence on the high street and the future of the industry as a whole. it would not have been taken lightly as reports suggested closing down would cost Best Buy and Carphone Warehouse around 100 million pounds.

One option being considered was selling its stores to the UK's fourth-largest supermarket group by share, Morrisons. Morrisons was reported to have expressed interest in acquiring the stores, mostly in large out-of-town retail sites, for its Kiddicare brand of baby, infant, and small children's products such as toys, pushchairs, costs, and so on.

The reports caused interest in the markets and some surprise given the challenges that exist in that market for some of the reasons that Best Buy found life difficult. An increasing trend to purchase goods online and the economic climate had already seen retailers like Mothercare and its Early Learning Centre stores facing declining sales and profits. Kiddicare had been an almost exclusively online operation and so the decision by Morrisons to move into the bricks and mortar sector was seen as a high-risk move.

Question:

How might Carphone Warehouse and Best Buy have gained economies of scale if they had committed new capital? Explain your reasoning.

Please provide with right and exact answer the one posted already is not accurate

In: Economics

CASE STUDY: EVIDENCE-BASED HRM Random Drug Testing at the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) The Supreme Court...

CASE STUDY: EVIDENCE-BASED HRM Random Drug Testing at the Toronto Transit Commission (TTC)
The Supreme Court of Canada has tended to accept drug testing when there is reasonable cause or following an incident; however, random drug testing has tended to be more controversial. The Toronto Transit Commission (TTC) recently implemented random drug testing, which met with opposition from the Amalgamated Transit Union (ATU) Canada. However, the judge resisted the injunction request from the ATU, based on expert evidence provided by the TTC that oral fluid technology has the ability to determine impairment due to drug use. The TTC’s web-site provides a list of specific drugs the random drug tests are targeting; for example, cocaine, amphetamines, oxyco-done, and marijuana/cannabis. These drugs were targeted
for testing because they “inhibit someone’s ability to per-form their job safely and productively.” The legalization of cannabis for recreational use in Can-ada has become a top-of-mind issue for both management and unions, and language in collective agreements that address its use likely requires revision. According to Linda Silas from the Canadian Federation of Nurses Unions (CFNU): “We as unions—but I think for employers too—are going to have to be very careful for a few years until the evidence is clear . . . the evidence is not there on what cannabis will do, how long it stays in your system, and what impairment [is].” In addition to recreational users, it is estimated that “450,000 Canadians will be using cannabis for medical purposes by 2024,” however, many organizations do not currently have bargained language in place
ques: Once negotiated, what data and information do employers and unions need to assess whether collec-tive agreement language related to drug use/abuse is supporting workplace health and safety?

In: Nursing