Question 2: AHP
A tourism company want to evaluate four hotels and select the best
one using four criteria project's COST, CLEANNESS and DISTANCE and
SIZE of the HOTEL. Assume that the company prefers; cleanness two
times more than size, cost two times more than distance, and
distance 1.5 times more than size.
|
Criterion |
|
|
|
|
||||
|
Cleanness |
Very good |
|
excellent |
average |
||||
|
Cost ($) |
200 |
175 |
250 |
190 |
||||
|
SIZE of rooms (m2) |
15 |
12 |
20 |
25 |
||||
|
Distance from Downtown (km) |
0 |
4 |
2 |
7 |
1. Calculate the weights of each criteria
2. Generate the pair-wise comparison of hotels based on each
criterion using the scale of Saaty (1-9)
3. Calculate the score of each hotel based on each criterion
4. Calculate the score of each hotel. Justify the best selection
for the company.
5. Calculate CI, and CR. What does the value of CT means?
In: Advanced Math
IN JAVA PLEASE
Program 4: Is there a Prius version? Did you know that the average Boeing 747 airplane uses approximately 1 gallon of fuel per second? Given the speed of the airplane, that means it gets 5 gallons to the mile. No, not 5 miles to the gallon, 5 gallons to the mile. You may be questioning why such a horribly inefficient machine is allowed to exist, but you’ll be happy to find out that, because this airplane hold 568 people, it averages about 0.01 gallons per person – (100 miles per gallon per person). Your job is to design (pseudocode) and implement (source code) a program that asks the user for a distance the plane has to fly (i.e. the length of the trip) and also asks the cost of jet fuel (which is currently $1.80 per gallon). The program should then calculate the total fuel charges to make the trip. Next, ask the user how many people will fly, as well as the average cost of a ticket. Finally, print the total profit made (or lost) and the average gas mileage per person. Document your code and properly label the input prompts and the outputs as shown below.
Sample run 1: Enter the flight distance: 1000 Enter the current cost of jet fuel: $2 The flight will cost $10000.0 in fuel. Enter the number of passengers: 5 Enter the average cost of a ticket: 1000 You will make a profit of $-5000.0 You averaged 1.0 miles per person per gallon!
Sample run 2: Enter the flight distance: 500 Enter the current cost of jet fuel: $3 The flight will cost $7500.0 in fuel. Enter the number of passengers: 500 Enter the average cost of a ticket: 300 You will make a profit of $142500.0 You averaged 100.0 miles per person per gallon!
Sample run 3: Enter the flight distance: 4200 Enter the current cost of jet fuel: $1.80 The flight will cost $37800.0 in fuel. Enter the number of passengers: 550 Enter the average cost of a ticket: 600 You will make a profit of $292200.0 You averaged 110.0 miles per person per gallon!
In: Computer Science
what are the interior and exterior facilities required to construct an amusement park
details of infrastructure of an amusement park
In: Civil Engineering
In Crystal Ball
The Harriet Hotel in downtown Boston has 100 rooms that rent for $150 per night. It costs the hotel $30 per room in variable costs (cleaning, bathroom items, etc.) each night a room is occupied. For each reservation accepted, there is a 5% chance that the guest will not arrive. If the hotel overbooks, it costs $200 to compensate guests whose reservations cannot be honored.
How many reservations should the hotel accept if it wants to maximize the average daily profit?
In: Statistics and Probability
Hotel (hotelno(PK), hotelname, city)
• Room (roomno (PK), hotelno (PK,FK), type, price) type can be single, double, family
• Booking (hotelno(PK,FK), guestno(PK,FK), startdate(PK), enddate, roomno(PK,FK))
• Guest (guestno(PK), guestname, guestaddress)
1-Display on the screen the hotel name and city of all room type family.
2-Display hotel name and city for the guests currently staying at the Holiday Inn Hotel.
In: Computer Science
Question B1 Hong Kong Tourism Board (HKTB) has modified the hotel classification system to reflect more accurately the quality and service of Hong Kong Hotel. These factors are weighted to their relative importance according to the result of survey. The composite score of a hotel, which is compiled, based on the scores obtained for the indicators and the weights of the indicator and it is the overall measure reflecting the category of the hotel.
a) Identify FOUR components under Facilities factor; illustrate your answer with ONE example from each component.
b) From each component under Facilities, based on the official websites of EIGHT hotels in HKSAR, find out a total of EIGHT different hotels, including FOUR of them will get lowest score and FOUR of them will get highest score. Briefly provide reasons to support your findings.
c) Under Location, hotel can get score 1 to 5. Identify and explain FIVE different hotels, including ONE each with score 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 at Location, based on the websites of hotels in HKSAR.
d) Explain how a hotel can get the highest score under SRR.
e) Explain how a hotel can get the highest score under AARR. f) Under Business Mix, will a hotel get zero score? Explain your answer.
In: Operations Management
Describe how live theater could deal with the Intangibility, Inconsistency, Inseparability and Inventory (perishability) of marketing services.
(20 points)
In: Operations Management
Peter was born after an uneventful pregnancy and weighed 3.1kg. At 3 months, he developed otitis media and an upper respiratory tract infection. At the ages of 5 months and 11 months, he was admitted to hospital with Haemophilus influenzae pneumonia. The infections responded promptly to the appropriate antibiotics on each occasion. When 16 months old, he developed balanitis. He is the fourth child of unrelated parents: his three sisters show no predisposition to infection.
Examination at the age of 18 months showed a pale, thin child whose height and weight were below the third centile. There were no other abnormal features. He had been fully immunized as an infant (at 2, 3 and 4 months) with tetanus and diphtheria toxoids, whole-cell pertussis, Haemophilus conjugate vaccine and oral polio. In addition he had received measles, mumps and rubella vaccine at 12 months. All immunizations were uneventful.
Immunological investigations (Table C3.1) into the cause of his recurrent infections showed severe panhypogammaglobulinemia with absent antibody production. Although there was no family history of hypogammaglobulinemia, the absence of mature B lymphocytes in his peripheral blood strongly supported a diagnosis of ________________________________?????. His antibody deficiency was treated by 2-weekly intravenous infusions of human normal IgG in a dose of 400mg/kg body weight/month. Over the following 2 years, his health steadily improved: his weight and height are now on the 10th centile, and he has had only one episode of otitis media in the last 18 months.
Table C3.1 Immunological investigations
|
Quantitative serum immunoglobulins (g/l) |
||
|
IgG |
0.17 |
[5.5-10.0] |
|
IgA |
Not detected |
[0.3-0.8] |
|
IgM |
0.07 |
[0.4-1.8] |
|
Antibody activity |
||
|
Immunization responses |
||
|
Tetanus toxoid - no detectable IgG antibodies |
||
|
Diphtheria toxoid - no detectable IgG antibodies |
||
|
Polio - no IgG antibodies detected |
||
|
Measles - no IgG antibodies detected |
||
|
Rubella - no IgG antibodies detected |
||
|
Isohaemagglutinins (IgM) not detected (blood group A Rh+) |
||
|
Blood lymphocyte subpopulations (x109/l) |
||
|
Total lymphocyte count |
3.5 |
[2.5-5.0] |
|
T lymphocytes (CD3) |
3.02 |
[1.5-3.0] |
|
B lymphocytes (CD23) |
<0.03 |
[0.1-0.4] |
|
(CD19) |
<0.1 |
[0.3-1.0] |
|
(CD20) |
<0.1 |
[0.3-1.0] |
*Normal range for age 18 months shown in brackets.
In: Nursing
Miles Freq 0-4 3 5-9 14 10-14 13 15-19 4 Select the most appropriate sentence corresponding to two standard deviations. *About 68% of students drive between 5.5212 miles and 13.7730 miles to somewhere *At least 88.9% of students drive between -2.7306 miles and 22.0248 miles to *About 99.7% of students drive between 1.3953 miles and 17.8989 miles to *About 68% of students drive less than 22.0248 miles to *About 95% of students drive between 5.5212 miles and 13.7730 miles to *About 99.7% of students drive between -2.7306 miles and 22.0248 miles to *About 68% of students drive between 1.3953 miles and 17.8989 miles to *About 99.7% of students drive between 5.5212 miles and 13.7730 miles to *At least 75% of students drive between -2.7306 miles and 22.0248 miles to *At least 75% of students drive less than 22.0248 miles to *About 95% of students drive between 1.3953 miles and 17.8989 miles to *At least 75% of students drive between 1.3953 miles and 17.8989 miles to *About 95% of students drive less than 22.0248 miles to *At least 88.9% of students drive between 1.3953 miles and 17.8989 miles to *About 99.7% of students drive less than 22.0248 miles to *About 95% of students drive between -2.7306 miles and 22.0248 miles to *At least 88.9% of students drive less than 22.0248 miles to *About 68% of students drive between -2.7306 miles and 22.0248 miles to
In: Math
The United States appears at times to have a totally schizophrenic attitude toward protectionism. The United States was the country that proposed the establishment of the World Trade Organization as early as the late 1940s, and was also the only industrialized country that refused to ratify this at that time. The United States has consistently argued on the side of multinational free trade in GATT Rounds, and yet maintains many protectionist laws such as those which reserve oil shipments from Alaska to U.S. flag carriers. How can you explain this apparent lack of national consistency on this issue?
In: Economics