5.One of the levels of computer ethics involves knowledge about the good and bad ramifications of the use of computer technology. What do we call this level?
Select one:
a. Theoretical
b. Pop
c. Practical
d. Para
6.What do we call the physical arrangement of records in a database?
Select one:
a. External view
b. Logical view
c. User view
d. Internal view
7.All the following are IT application controls that can be used in the expenditure cycle except:
Select one:
a. Parallel operations cutover
b. Automated Three-Way Match and Payment Approval
c. Multilevel Security
d. Automated purchase approval
8.To have a permanent record of the transactions that have changed account balances, we need:
Select one:
a. Log
b. ITF
c. Balance sheet
d. Spooling
In: Accounting
Activity-Based Costing and Product Cost Distortion
Handbrain Inc. is considering a change to activity-based product costing. The company produces two products, cell phones and tablet PCs, in a single production department. The production department is estimated to require 4,000 direct labor hours. The total indirect labor is budgeted to be $462,400.
Time records from indirect labor employees revealed that they spent 40% of their time setting up production runs and 60% of their time supporting actual production.
The following information about cell phones and tablet PCs was determined from the corporate records:
Number of
SetupsDirect Labor
HoursUnits
Cell phones500 2,000 68,000
Tablet PCs1,100 2,000 68,000
Total1,600 4,000 136,000
If required, round your answers to the nearest cent.
a. Determine the indirect labor cost per unit allocated to cell phones and tablet PCs under a single plantwide factory overhead rate system using the direct labor hours as the allocation base.
Cell phones$ per unit
Tablet PCs$ per unit
b. Determine the budgeted activity costs and activity rates for the indirect labor under activity-based costing. Assume two activities—one for setup and the other for production support.
Budgeted Activity CostActivity Rate
Setup$$per setup
Production support$$per direct labor hour
c. Determine the activity cost per unit for indirect labor allocated to each product under activity-based costing.
Cell phones$ per unit
Tablet PCs$ per unit
d. Why are the per-unit allocated costs in (a) different from the per-unit activity cost assigned to the products in (c)?
The per-unit indirect labor costs in (a) are distorted because setup activity is consumed by the products in a different ratio from the direct labor. The activity-based costing method results in the product with the larger number of setups receiving a larger portion of the setup activity cost. The single-rate system allocates overhead only on the basis of direct labor hours. Since the direct labor hours are equal for each product, the allocated indirect labor will also be equal.
In: Accounting
Activity-Based Costing and Product Cost Distortion
Handbrain Inc. is considering a change to activity-based product costing. The company produces two products, cell phones and tablet PCs, in a single production department. The production department is estimated to require 4,000 direct labor hours. The total indirect labor is budgeted to be $462,400.
Time records from indirect labor employees revealed that they spent 40% of their time setting up production runs and 60% of their time supporting actual production.
The following information about cell phones and tablet PCs was determined from the corporate records:
Number of
SetupsDirect Labor
HoursUnits
Cell phones500 2,000 68,000
Tablet PCs1,100 2,000 68,000
Total1,600 4,000 136,000
If required, round your answers to the nearest cent.
a. Determine the indirect labor cost per unit allocated to cell phones and tablet PCs under a single plantwide factory overhead rate system using the direct labor hours as the allocation base.
Cell phones$ per unit
Tablet PCs$ per unit
b. Determine the budgeted activity costs and activity rates for the indirect labor under activity-based costing. Assume two activities—one for setup and the other for production support.
Budgeted Activity CostActivity Rate
Setup$$per setup
Production support$$per direct labor hour
c. Determine the activity cost per unit for indirect labor allocated to each product under activity-based costing.
Cell phones$ per unit
Tablet PCs$ per unit
d. Why are the per-unit allocated costs in (a) different from the per-unit activity cost assigned to the products in (c)?
The per-unit indirect labor costs in (a) are distorted because is consumed by the products in a different ratio from the direct labor. The costing method results in the product with the number of setups receiving a larger portion of the setup activity cost. The allocates overhead only on the basis of direct labor hours. Since the direct labor hours equal for each product, the allocated indirect labor will also equal.
In: Accounting
Handbrain Inc. is considering a change to activity-based product costing. The company produces two products, cell phones and tablet PCs, in a single production department. The production department is estimated to require 4,000 direct labor hours. The total indirect labor is budgeted to be $524,800.
Time records from indirect labor employees revealed that they spent 40% of their time setting up production runs and 60% of their time supporting actual production.
The following information about cell phones and tablet PCs was determined from the corporate records:
| Number of Setups |
Direct Labor Hours |
Units | ||||||||
| Cell phones | 500 | 2,000 | 64,000 | |||||||
| Tablet PCs | 1,100 | 2,000 | 64,000 | |||||||
| Total | 1,600 | 4,000 | 128,000 | |||||||
If required, round your answers to the nearest cent.
a. Determine the indirect labor cost per unit allocated to cell phones and tablet PCs under a single plantwide factory overhead rate system using the direct labor hours as the allocation base.
| Cell phones | $ per unit |
| Tablet PCs | $ per unit |
b. Determine the budgeted activity costs and activity rates for the indirect labor under activity-based costing. Assume two activities—one for setup and the other for production support.
| Budgeted Activity Cost | Activity Rate | ||
| Setup | $ | $ | per setup |
| Production support | $ | $ | per direct labor hour |
c. Determine the activity cost per unit for indirect labor allocated to each product under activity-based costing.
| Cell phones | $ per unit |
| Tablet PCs | $ per unit |
d. Why are the per-unit allocated costs in (a) different from the per-unit activity cost assigned to the products in (c)?
The per-unit indirect labor costs in (a) are distorted because is consumed by the products in a different ratio from the direct labor. The costing method results in the product with the number of setups receiving a larger portion of the setup activity cost. The allocates overhead only on the basis of direct labor hours. Since the direct labor hours equal for each product, the allocated indirect labor will also equal.
In: Accounting
|
A school counselor noticed that students seemed to have a more depressed mood as finals approach. Based on this observation she wondered if there might a relationship between the students’ workload in a given month and their level of depressed mood. Specifically, she recorded the number of tests and quizzes eight students had in a given month and also assessed their levels of depressed mood at the end of the month. Higher numbers indicate more depressed mood. She decides to conduct a two-tailed test. Calculate Pearson's r. |
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
.64 |
||
|
.78 |
||
|
.16 |
||
|
.50 |
||
|
.04 |
In: Statistics and Probability
The monthly incomes of two persons are in the ratio 4 : 5 and their monthly expenditures are in the ratio 7 : 9. If each saves 50 per month, find their monthly incomes.
In: Math
Match each of the following marine organisms with their identifying characteristics. Two of them are wrong.
baleen whales large filter feeders
echinoderms spiny skin
red algae microalgae that can cause red tide toxic bloom
dinoflagellates complex life cycles with multiple stage
diatoms have silica (glass) shells
crabs and lobsters decopods (have 10 legs)
manatee herbivorous marine mammal
mangrove intertidal zone tree
sponges structurally simple animal that filters water
anemones and medusae have stinging cells on their tentacles
snails and sea slugs have a muscular foot, eat with radula
mussel and clam mollusks with 2 shells
hermit crab crustacean that lives in a snail shell
hagfish and lampreys jawless fish
sharks skeleton of cartilage, not bone
tuna, salmon or anchovy bony fish with ray fins
leatherback sea turtle marine reptile returns to land to lay eggs
In: Biology
|
Match the region of the antibody with its correct function by using the following two options a) Fc b) Fab |
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In: Biology
Doing recursion to match digits of two inputted integers. Found this online and it works but I wanna understand how each line works. Like why x %10 == y%10 and calling DigitMatch(x/10,y/10)?
public int digitMatch(int x, int y){
if(x < 0 || y < 0){
throw new IllegalArgumentException();
}
else if(x < 10 || y < 10){
if(x % 10 == y % 10)
return 1;
else
return 0;
} else if( x % 10 == y % 10){
return 1 + digitMatch(x/10, y/10);
}
else{
return digitMatch(x/10,y/10);
}
In: Computer Science
The article "Plugged In, but Tuned Out"† summarizes data from two surveys of kids age 8 to 18. One survey was conducted in 1999 and the other was conducted in 2009. Data on number of hours per day spent using electronic media that are consistent with summary quantities given in the article are given below (the actual sample sizes for the two surveys were much larger). For purposes of this exercise, assume that it is reasonable to regard the two samples as representative of kids age 8 to 18 in each of the 2 years that the surveys were conducted.
2009 5 9 5 8 7 6 7 9 7 9 6 9 10 9 8
1999 4 5 7 7 5 7 5 6 5 6 7 8 5 6 6
(a) Do the given data provide convincing evidence that the mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media was greater in 2009 than in 1999? Test the relevant hypotheses using a significance level of 0.01. (Use a statistical computer package to calculate the P-value. Use ?2009 ? ?1999. Round your test statistic to two decimal places, your df down to the nearest whole number, and your P-value to three decimal places.)
t =
df =
P-value =
State your conclusion.
Fail to reject H0. There is not convincing evidence that the mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media was greater in 2009 than in 1999. Reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media was greater in 2009 than in 1999. Reject H0. There is not convincing evidence that the mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media was greater in 2009 than in 1999. Fail to reject H0. There is convincing evidence that the mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media was greater in 2009 than in 1999. (b) Construct and interpret a 98% confidence interval estimate of the difference between the mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media in 2009 and 1999. (Use ?2009 ? ?1999. Round your answers to two decimal places.) to hours Interpret the interval. There is a 98% chance that the true mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media in 2009 is directly in the middle of these two values. We are 98% confident that the true mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media in 2009 is between these two values. There is a 98% chance that the true difference in mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media in 2009 and 1999 is directly in the middle of these two values. We are 98% confident that the true mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media in 1999 is between these two values. We are 98% confident that the true difference in mean number of hours per day spent using electronic media in 2009 and 1999 is between these two values.
In: Statistics and Probability