What is intersectionality and why is intersectionality so important when thinking about LGBTQ issues? (300 words minimum)
Links below about intersectionality:
https://www.equality-network.org/our-work/intersectional/
http://www.pewglobal.org/2013/06/04/the-global-divide-on-homosexuality/
In: Psychology
As consumers, we continually interact and consume brands to satisfy our functional and emotional needs. Applying the theory covered as part of this module to your own experience as consumers,-
Service brands face many challenges because of their unique characteristics. Identify a brand you are familiar with and evaluate how the service brand overcomes these unique challenges .
In: Operations Management
There are two algorithms:
–Algorithm A requires 5*n2 time units to solve a problem of size n.
–Algorithm B requires 7*n time units to solve a problem of size n.
Draw a chart (graph) to show the performance of the programs.
In: Computer Science
In what ways have you encountered power, privilege, and oppression in your own life?
In: Psychology
Moore Housing Contractors
Moore Housing Contractors is negotiating a deal with Countryside Realtors to build six houses in a new development. Countryside wants Moore Contractors to start in late winter or early spring when the weather begins to moderate and build through the summer into the fall. The summer months are a busy time for the realty company, and it believes it can sell the houses almost as soon as they are ready-sometimes before. The houses all have similar floor plans and are of approximately equal size; only the exteriors are noticeably different. The completion time is so critical for Countryside Realtors that it is insisting a project management network accompany the con tractor's bid for the job with an estimate of the completion time for a house. The realtor also needs to be able to plan its offerings and marketing for the summer. The realtor wants each house to be completed within 45 days after it is started. If a house is not completed within this time frame, the realtor wants to be able to charge the contractor a penalty. Mary and Sandy Moore, the president and vice president of Moore Housing Contractors, are concerned about the prospect of a penalty. They want to be confident they can meet the deadline house before entering into any agreement with a penalty involved. (If there is a reasonable likelihood they cannot house within 45 days, they want to increase their bid to potential penalty charges.)
The Moores are experienced homebuilders, so it was not difficult for them to list the activities involved in building a house or to estimate activity times. However, they made estimates conservatively and tended to increase their pessimistic estimates to compensate for the possibility of bad weather and variations in their workforce. Following is a list of the activities for building a house and the activity time estimates:
Activity |
Description |
Immediate Predecessor |
Time (days) |
||
Optimistic a |
Most Likely m |
Pessimistic b |
|||
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x |
Excavation, pour footers Lay foundation Frame and roof Lay drain tiles Sewer (floor) drains Install Insulation Pour basement floor Rough Plumbing, pipes Install windows Rough electrical wiring Install furnace, air conditioner Exterior brickwork Install plasterboard, mud, plaster Roof shingles, flashing Attach gutter, downspouts Grading Lay subflooring Lay driveway, walks, landscape Finish carpentry Kitchen cabinetry, sink, and appliances Bathroom cabinetry, fixtures Painting (interior and exterior) Finish wood floors, lay carpet Final electrical, light fixtures |
─ a b b b c e e f f c, g i j, h, k l n d, o m p q q q t, u v, s v |
3 2 2 1 1 2 2 2 1 1 3 5 6 2 1 2 3 4 3 2 2 4 2 1 |
4 3 4 2 2 4 3 4 3 2 5 6 8 3 2 3 4 6 5 4 3 6 5 3 |
6 5 5 4 3 5 5 7 4 4 8 10 12 6 5 7 6 10 12 8 6 10 8 4 |
In: Operations Management
Answer:
Answer:
Answer:
Choose external information as it makes sense to you Create connection between individual knowledge and community knowledge Create knowledge by involving with objects through self-involvement and commitment All of the above
In: Operations Management
Generate 8 × 8 random complex unitary matrix in Matlab. You can only use eig and randn Matlab functions. Your code can only have two lines and no semicolumns. You should generate a different random unitary matrix with each run.
In: Electrical Engineering
In: Nursing
As more people are required to "Shelter in Place", the shortage of certain items such as some food and household items in the grocery stores becomes a problem. Let's focus on 3 items in particular; eggs, bananas and toilet papers. It is safe to assume that the nation's total usage of these items has not changed.
With that assumption in mind
a) How do you justify the shortage in the stores?
b) Assuming you are managing operations for a farm producing and packing eggs for restaurants and catering services (non retail). What changes would you consider in your operations to be able to cope with the potential shift in demand in future?
Explain the "shift in demand" and why operations are struggling to cope with it. Provide at least two feedback debating each other's points of view.
Hint: It's not all about hoarding!
In: Operations Management
Could I please get explainations and working out as to how to get to the answers.
Note that is where part of the answer goes.
1.
Write a statement that removes the first occurrence of item 10 (if any) from an ArrayList of Integer objects, data.
data.remove( );
2.
Complete the following function that returns true if ArrayList list contains any positive (more than 0) item, false otherwise.
public static containsPositive(ArrayList list) {
for(int i=0; i < list.size(); i++) {
if( ) {
; }
} ; }
3.
Consider the following list:
ArrayList list = new ArrayList(Arrays.asList(10, 70, 20, 90, 30, 80, 50, 40, 60));
Complete the following code that gives the following output:
20 90 30 80 50 40 60
<interger> iter = list.listIterator( );
while(iter. ) {
System.out.println( +" ");
}
In: Computer Science
Volvo's Indian buses
Volvo’s Indian Buses The Indian bus market has long been dominated by two subsidiaries of major Indian conglomerates: Tata Motors and Ashok Leyland. They made simple coaches on a design that had hardly changed for decades. On top of a basic truck chassis, the two companies bolted a rudimentary coach body. Engines were a meagre 110-120 horsepower (hp), and roared heartily as they hauled their loads up the steep roads. Mounted at the front, the heat from the over-strained engines would pervade the whole bus. Air conditioning was a matter of open windows, through which the dust and noise of the Indian roads would pour. Suspension was oldfashioned, guaranteeing a shaky ride on potholed roads. Bags were typically slung on the top of the bus, where they were easily soiled and at high risk of theft. But at least the buses were cheap, selling to local bus companies at around Rs 1.2m (€15,000, £12,000, $19,500). In 1997, Swedish bus company Volvo entered, with buses priced at Rs 4m, nearly four times as much as local products. Akash Passey, Volvo’s first Indian employee, commissioned a consultancy company to evaluate prospects. The consultancy company recommended that Volvo should not even try. Passey told the Financial Times: ‘My response was simple – I took the report and went to the nearest dustbin and threw it in.’ Passey entered the market in 2001 with the high-priced luxury buses. Passey used the time to develop a distinctive strategy. His product had superior features. Volvo’s standard engines were 240-250 hp and mounted at the back, ensuring a faster and quieter ride. Air conditioning was standard of course. The positioning of the engine and the specific bus design of the chassis meant a roomier interior, plus storage for bags internally. But Plassey realised this would not be enough. He commented to the Financial Times: ‘You had to do a lot of things to break the way business is done normally.’ Volvo offered post-sale maintenance services, increasing the life expectancy of buses from three to ten years, and allowing bus operating companies to dispense with their own expensive maintenance workshops. Free training was given to drivers, so they drove more safely and took more care of their buses. The company advertised the benefits of the buses direct to customers in cinemas, rather than simply promoting them to the bus operators. Faster, smoother and more reliable travel allowed the bus operators to increase their ticket prices for the Volvo buses by 35 per cent. Business people and the middle classes were delighted with the new Volvo services. Speedier, more comfortable journeys allowed them to arrive fresh for meetings and potentially to save the costs of overnight stays. Tata and Ashok Leyland both now produce their own luxury buses, with Mercedes and Isuzu following Volvo into the market. Nonetheless, the phrase ‘taking a Volvo’ has become synonymous with choosing a luxury bus service in India, rather as ‘hoover’ came to refer to any kind of vacuum cleaner. A new state-of-the-art bus factory was opened in Bangalore in 2008 and after further investments in 2012 it doubled the annual capacity to 1,500 buses per year. As Volvo’s most efficient bus factory worldwide it started to export buses to Europe three years later. In 2016, Volvo continued its distinctive strategy and became the first bus company in India to manufacture and sell hybrid buses running on an electric motor and battery as well as diesel.
QUESTIONS- only need question 3 answered*
1. Discuss the Business-Level Strategy pursued by Volvo in the Indian Bus Market, and the resources and competences on which it is based.
2. Critically assess the threats to Volvo’s strategy and how such threats might be countered.
3. Discuss how your experience of travel on public transport informed your answers to questions 1 and 2 above.
In: Operations Management
EX23-03
Budget Performance Report
Genie in a Bottle Company (GBC) manufactures plastic two-liter bottles for the beverage industry. The cost standards per 100 two-liter bottles are as follows:
Cost Category | Standard Cost per 100 Two-Liter Bottles |
|||||
Direct labor | $1.16 | |||||
Direct materials | 5.8 | |||||
Factory overhead | 0.3 | |||||
Total | $7.26 |
At the beginning of July, GBC management planned to produce 430,000 bottles. The actual number of bottles produced for July was 464,400 bottles. The actual costs for July of the current year were as follows:
Cost Category | Actual Cost for the Month Ended July 31 |
|||||||||
Direct labor | $5,279 | |||||||||
Direct materials | 26,289 | |||||||||
Factory overhead | 1,407 | |||||||||
Total | $32,975 |
Enter all amounts as positive numbers.
a. Prepare the July manufacturing standard cost budget (direct labor, direct materials, and factory overhead) for WBC, assuming planned production.
Genie in a Bottle Company | |
Manufacturing Cost Budget | |
For the Month Ended March 31 | |
Standard Cost at Planned Volume (430,000 Bottles) |
|
Manufacturing costs: | |
Direct labor | $ |
Direct materials | |
Factory overhead | |
Total | $ |
b. Prepare a budget performance report for manufacturing costs, showing the total cost variances for direct materials, direct labor, and factory overhead for July. Enter a favorable variance as a negative number using a minus sign and an unfavorable variance as a positive number. Round your answers to two decimal places.
Genie in a Bottle Company | |||
Manufacturing Costs-Budget Performance Report | |||
For the Month Ended March 31 | |||
Actual Costs |
Standard Cost at Actual Volume (464,400 Bottles) |
Cost Variance- (Favorable) Unfavorable |
|
Manufacturing costs: | |||
Direct labor | $ | $ | $ |
Direct materials | |||
Factory overhead | |||
Total manufacturing cost | $ | $ | $ |
c. The Company's actual costs were $740.44 than budgeted. direct labor and direct material cost variances more than offset a small factory overhead cost variance.
In: Accounting
A hollow sphere is rolling along a horizontal floor at 7.00 m/s when it comes to a 31.0 ∘ incline.
How far up the incline does it roll before reversing direction?
Express your answer with the appropriate units.
In: Physics
Modern genetics can prevent the tragedy of a life doomed by heredity. Embryos can now be screened for some genetic diseases. But what constitutes a disease? Should genetic testing be used to select a child’s characteristics? Is so—what characteristics.
In: Psychology
Which of these best describes the gametophyte in the alternation of generations life cycle?
A. generation that produces the gametes
B. the diploid generation
C. generation that produces the spores
D. generation that has vascular tissue
E. uses meiosis within structures called sporangia
Plants have a/an _________ life cycle.
A. |
alternation of generations |
|
B. |
asexual-only |
|
C. |
sexual-only |
|
D. |
diplontic |
|
E. |
haplontic |
Which of these are gymnosperms?
A. |
all of the above |
|
B. |
cycads |
|
C. |
ginkgo--the maidenhair tree |
|
D. |
conifers |
In plants, the dominant generation is _________.
A. |
the larger and more conspicuous generation |
||
B. |
|
||
C. |
the parent |
||
D. |
dependent upon which plant is discussed |
||
E. |
shorter lived |
In: Biology