Find the closed form for the following series: 1 + x2 + x3 + … + xn where x is constant and x > 1
In: Computer Science
Value is the ratio of costs now and benefits in the future.
In: Operations Management
In: Biology
what would be the appropriate performance appraisal method to assess students' performance in class? What would be the key areas that you would focus on? What areas would you consider less important? How would you approach increasing performance?
HRM
In: Operations Management
Shamrock Leasing Company signs a lease agreement on January 1, 2017, to lease electronic equipment to Pharoah Company. The term of the non-cancelable lease is 2 years, and payments are required at the end of each year. The following information relates to this agreement:
1. Pharoah has the option to purchase the equipment for $17,500 upon termination of the lease. It is not reasonably certain that Pharoah will exercise this option.
2. The equipment has a cost of $150,000 and fair value of $199,000 to Shamrock Leasing. The useful economic life is 2 years, with a residual value of $17,500.
3. Shamrock Leasing desires to earn a return of 5% on its investment. 4. Collectibility of the payments by Shamrock Leasing is probable.
Prepare the journal entries on the books of Shamrock Leasing to reflect the payments received under the lease and to recognize income for the years 2017 and 2018.
In: Accounting
As a city planner, you receive complaints from local residents about the safety of nearby roads and streets. One complaint concerns a stop sign at the corner of Pine Street and 1st Street. Residents complain that the speed limit in the area (89 km/h) is too high to allow vehicles to stop in time. Under normal conditions this is not a problem, but when fog rolls in visibility can reduce to only 47 meters. Since fog is a common occurrence in this region, you decide to investigate. The state highway department states that the effective coefficient of friction between a rolling wheel and asphalt ranges between 0.842 and 0.941, whereas the effective coefficient of friction between a skidding (locked) wheel and asphalt ranges between 0.550 and 0.754. Vehicles of all types travel on the road, from small VW bugs with a mass of 595 kg to large trucks with mass 4095 kg. Considering that some drivers will brake properly when slowing down and others will skid to stop, calculate the miminim and maximum braking distance needed to ensure that all vehicles traveling at the posted speed limit can stop before reaching the intersection. Minimu =? Maximum=?Given that the goal is to allow all vehicles to come safely to a stop before reaching the intersection, calculate the maximum desired speed limit. = kmh?.
In: Physics
Using THIS template, answer the three questions concluding the summary (minimum four sentences, per question).
Fast-Fashion and the Ethics of Low-Cost Labor
Who wants to wait six months for runway looks to hit the stores? In today’s fast-fashion world, six months is an eternity. Nearly extinct is the tradition of three luxurious fashion seasons per year (fall, spring, resort). Those seasons have been replaced by rock-bottom prices on 30 to 50 trend-driven cycles—per year. Consumers in the United States and Europe have embraced the entire fast-fashion approach—inexpensive apparel and high turnover of designs. In fact, their shopping behaviors have allowed companies like H&M and Zara to grow into international retailing behemoths.
The speed of fast-fashion goes beyond the production cycle. Europe’s fast-fashion chains have grown faster than the retail fashion industry as a whole, partly because the combination of low cost, fresh designs, and quick turnover is extremely successful in fueling consumer demand. Fast-fashion companies also boast higher margins that those reported by their traditional counterparts—an average 16% compared to an average of 7%. Undeniably, the application of planned obsolescence to fashion has been financially successful.
The fast-fashion approach is not without controversy, however, particularly when it comes to outsourcing production. Companies like Benetton, Walmart, and Disney place huge orders with offshore vendors who often cannot deliver the entire order without enlisting the help of additional subcontractors. Unauthorized subcontracting is the end result, and brands don’t always know who is producing their products or where. Phil Robertson, deputy director of Human Rights Watch’s Asia division, affirms this, saying, “I’ve talked to Thai workers who are three or four levels down from the original orders. If the brands don’t know, they should know. A lot of them are turning a blind eye to outsourcing.”
One country that has grown from outsourcing in the garment industry is Bangladesh. With labor rates averaging $40 per month, Bangladeshi garment workers are the cheapest around. (Compare that to approximately $120 per month on average for garment workers in China.) Those low labor costs have caused explosive growth in the size and scope of the country’s garment industry. In 2005, the country exported $6.9 billion worth of clothing. By 2011, that figure had risen to $19.9 billion, making the Bangladesh the world’s third largest exporter of clothing, behind China and Italy.
Makeshift garment factories have popped up all over Bangladesh. It now has roughly 4,500 garment factories, and disasters have ensued from the rapid growth. In November 2012, the fire at the Tazreen Fashion factory resulted in 112 deaths. In the subsequent five months, over 40 other fire-related accidents occurred in Bangladesh, and in April 2013, Rana Plaza, a building housing numerous garment factories, collapsed killing over 1,000 people.
Bangladesh isn’t the only country where concerns about subcontracting are growing. Vietnam, Indonesia, Thailand, and Cambodia also regularly face issues with multilayer outsourcing, and each of them could be next in line to wear the lowest-labor-cost title.
Subcontracting to vendors to produce garments at lower costs can be beneficial to companies in the following ways:
Despite the benefits, subcontracting to low-cost providers with unsafe working conditions has generated much controversy, not only in fast-fashion, but in the broader apparel and footwear industry as well:
So, who is ethically responsible?
You Decide:
In: Operations Management
in java
Design and implement a class named Person and its two subclasses named Student and Employee. Make Faculty and Staff subclasses of Employee. A person has a name,address, phone number, and email address. A student has a class status (year 1,year 2,year 3,or year 4). An employee has an office, salary, and date hired. Use the Date class from JavaAPI 8 to create an object for date hired. A faculty member has office hours and a rank. A staff member has a title. Override the toString method in each class to display the class name and the person’s name.Design and implement all 5classes. Write a test program that creates a Person,Student,Employee,Faculty, and Staff, and iinvokes their toString()methods
In: Computer Science
My business would be computer repair/custom computer building. Once you have chosen a product/service, write a business plan. Below you will find information needed to execute your business plan. The Business Plan Cheat Sheet is helpful! Use the Business Plan Cheat Sheet to help you understand what information is needed to complete your Business Plan. Order of Business Plan Cover Page (2.5) Executive Summary (5) Business Description Mission Statement (2.5) Type of Business (2.5) Product Description (2.5) Position (2.5) Pricing Strategy (2.5) Market and Industry Analysis Customer Profile (2.5) Market Segment (2.5) Target Market and Demographics (2.5) Competition (2.5) Sales and Marketing Method of sales (2.5) Advertising and Promotion (2.5) Slogan (1) Management Ownership (1) Financials Risk (2.5) Expenses and Capital requirements (2.5) Total= 42 Points
In: Operations Management
A manufacturer of microwaves has discovered that female shoppers have little value for microwaves and attribute almost no extra value to an auto-defrost feature. Male shoppers generally value microwaves more than women do and attribute greater value to the auto-defrost feature. There is little additional cost to incorporating an auto-defrost feature. Since men and women cannot be charged different prices for the same product, the manufacturer is considering introducing two different models. The manufacturer has determined that men value a simple microwave at $67 and one with auto-defrost at $124, while women value a simple microwave at $57 and one with auto-defrost at $67.
Suppose the manufacturer is considering three pricing strategies:
| 1. | Market a single microwave, with auto-defrost, at $67, to both men and women. |
| 2. | Market a single microwave, with auto-defrost, at $124, to only men. |
| 3. | Market a simple microwave to women, at $57. Market a microwave, with auto-defrost, to men at $113. |
For simplicity, assume there is only 1 man and 1 woman and that if the price of a microwave is equal to an individual's willingness to pay, the individual will purchase the microwave.
Strategy
Revenue from Men
Revenue from Women
Total Revenue from Strategy
1. Auto-Defrost Microwave only at $67
2. Auto-Defrost Microwave only at $1243. Simple Microwave at $57, Auto-Defrost Microwave at $113
Suppose that, instead of one man and one woman, the market for this microwave consisted entirely of men. For simplicity, you can assume this means that there are two men, and no women.
Under these conditions, pricing strategy would maximize revenue for the manufacturer.
In: Economics
For C++ Use arrays and or vectors, no classes.
Visualize and consider 100 lockers all lined up horizontally in
a row
Each locker is numbered from 1 to 100 in sequential order
Every locker can be fully closed (open state = 0.00)
Every locker can be fully opened (open = 1.00)
Every locker can be partially open with any possible value between
0.00 and 1.00 inclusive on both ends
A locker cannot ever be more closed than fully closed (open cannot
be less than 0.00)
A locker cannot ever be more open than fully opened (open cannot be
greater than 1.00)
All 100 lockers start in the fully closed state
100 students will be walking by the lockers and opening/closing
them in the following manner:
The 1st student will OPEN EVERY LOCKER 1/2 of the way (ADD 0.50 TO LOCKERS 1,2,3,4...)
The 2nd student will CLOSE EVERY SECOND LOCKER 1/3 of the way (SUBTRACT 0.333333333333 FROM LOCKERS 2,4,6,8...)
The 3rd student will OPEN EVERY THIRD LOCKER 1/4 of the way (ADD 0.25 TO LOCKERS 3,6,9,12...)
The 4th student will CLOSE EVERY FOURTH LOCKER 1/5 of the way (SUBTRACT 0.20 FROM LOCKERS 4,8,12,16...)
The 5th student will OPEN EVERY FIFTH LOCKER 1/6 of the way (ADD 0.166666666666 TO LOCKERS 5,10,15,20...)
The 6th student will CLOSE EVERY SIXTH LOCKER 1/7 of the way (SUBTRACT 0.142857142857 FROM LOCKERS 6,12,18,24...)
The 99th student will OPEN EVERY 99TH LOCKER 1/100 of the way (ADD 0.01 TO LOCKER 99)
The 100th student will CLOSE EVERY 100TH LOCKER 1/101 of the way (SUBTRACT 0.009900990099 FROM LOCKER 100)
NOTE: Remember that the locker open state must always stay within 0.00 <= value <= 1.00
1) Develop C++ code that will generate the open state values for
all 100 lockers
2) Also develop C++ code that will output answers to the following
questions:
Which lockers are left fully closed (open state == 0.00)?
Which lockers are left fully open (open state == 1.00)?
Which locker is the one opened the least and what is its value (open state closest to 0.00)?
Which locker is the one closed the least and what is its value (open state closest to 1.00)?
In: Computer Science
Analyze the process by which U.S. judges are nominated and confirmed. Does this seem like a fair process?
In: Psychology
The following are selected account balances from Penske Company and Stanza Corporation as of December 31, 2021:
| Penske | Stanza | ||||||||
| Revenues | $ | (818,000) | $ | (756,000) | |||||
| Cost of goods sold | 291,300 | 189,000 | |||||||
| Depreciation expense | 208,000 | 272,000 | |||||||
| Investment income | Not given | 0 | |||||||
| Dividends declared | 80,000 | 60,000 | |||||||
| Retained earnings, 1/1/21 | (750,000) | (360,000) | |||||||
| Current assets | 414,000 | 588,000 | |||||||
| Copyrights | 1,060,000 | 550,500 | |||||||
| Royalty agreements | 662,000 | 1,138,000 | |||||||
| Investment in Stanza | Not given | 0 | |||||||
| Liabilities | (502,000) | (1,401,500) | |||||||
| Common stock | (600,000) | ($20 par) | (200,000) | ($10 par) | |||||
| Additional paid-in capital | (150,000) | (80,000) | |||||||
Note: Parentheses indicate a credit balance.
On January 1, 2021, Penske acquired all of Stanza’s outstanding stock for $929,000 fair value in cash and common stock. Penske also paid $10,000 in stock issuance costs. At the date of acquisition, copyrights (with a six-year remaining life) have a $616,000 book value but a fair value of $706,000.
As of December 31, 2021, what is the consolidated copyrights balance?
For the year ending December 31, 2021, what is consolidated net income?
As of December 31, 2021, what is the consolidated retained earnings balance?
As of December 31, 2021, what is the consolidated balance to be reported for goodwill?
In: Accounting
You need a 25-year, fixed-rate mortgage to buy a new home for
$240,000. Your mortgage bank will lend you the money at a 7.1
percent APR for this 300-month loan. However, you can afford
monthly payments of only $850, so you offer to pay off any
remaining loan balance at the end of the loan in the form of a
single balloon payment. How large will this balloon payment have to
be for you to keep your monthly payments at $850?
A) $687,844.56
B) $737,482.82
C) $101,874.08
D) $709,118.1
E) $120,814.04
In: Finance
I need a very simple examples of Transactional, Transformational and Charismatic Leadership Styles
In: Operations Management