with procedures that must be followed exactly. Discretionary areas of business are those situations where owners and their employees have room to maneuver‚ compromise‚ bargain and make deals within established boundaries. Non-discretionary areas are topics or situations with very specific rules‚ regulations or other guidance that requires one way of acting. Compromise is unacceptable in these areas. Safety is one non-discretionary area that is immediately recognizable. Business is a complicated arena
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Areas of Combat Engineering Engineering has expanded its wings and moved into numerous new horizons and domains. Engineering is one such field that has not limited its scope to just a few domains. One new domain that has been invaded by engineering is combat. Combat engineers are special engineers trained to build and develop technologies and devices under different combat conditions. Combat engineering is a special field not because it is new or different but because it tackles and deals with one
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360 where‚ Qy = y year ARI peak flow (m3/s) C= dimensionless runoff coefficient yI t = y year ARI average rainfall intensity over time of concentration‚ tc ‚ (mm/hr) A= drainage area (ha) Or Q=CiA i = average rainfall intensity (in/hr)equals to tc A = catchment area ( acre) Q = Peak flow ( cusecs) Rational Method 1 Qp tc tc +td • Experience has shown that the Rational Method can provide satisfactory estimates of peak discharge on small catchments
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Essay 16 Local Area Networks Marshall D. Abrams and Harold J. Podell L ocal area n e t w ork (L AN) communicat io ns s ecurity is address ed in t his essay. LANs are introduc ed as providing: (1) a privat e communicat io ns facility‚ (2) s ervic es ov er a r elativ ely limit ed g e ographic area‚ (3) a high dat a rat e for comput er communicat io ns‚ and (4) common acc ess t o a wid e rang e of d evice s and s ervic es. S ecurity issu es p ert in e nt t o L ANs ar e discuss e d. For e
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Functional Area Interrelationships Jason Carvalho‚ Jacob Gliniany‚ Karim Jalil‚ Learni Walton BUS/475 February 16th‚ 2015 Dr. Richard Taylor Table of Content I. Introduction………………………………………………………………………………3 II. Mission‚ Vision‚ Values‚ and Goals……………………………………………………...3 a). Mission……………………………………………………………………………3 b). Vision……………………………………………………………………………..3 c). Values and Goals…………………………………………………………………4 III. Organizational Structure………………………………………………………………....4 IV. Collaborative Process among Functional
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Should companies operate in Violent Areas: |Yes |No | |The higher the risk‚ the bigger the reward |Easy mark for kidnapping | |Disease is still a bigger risk than violence |There are about 8.000 kidnappings per year‚ most of them foreign | |
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1. Can ICTs be innovatively used in the absence of minimum literacy levels among the poor? Yes they can be used in the absence of minimum literacy levels among the poor. The ICT plays a big role in the rural areas and benefits the people that live there. ICT’s are used in the poor communities to empower and help the illiterate and people with less knowledge. Applications in agricultural and rural development have often been to provide direct access to market and weather information for the poor
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E Properties of Plane Areas Notation: A area x‚ y distances to centroid C Ix‚ Iy moments of inertia with respect to the x and y axes‚ respectively Ixy product of inertia with respect to the x and y axes IP Ix Iy polar moment of inertia with respect to the origin of the x and y axes IBB moment of inertia with respect to axis B-B 1 y x h C b y x Rectangle (Origin of axes at centroid) A Ix bh bh3 12 x Iy b 2 hb3 12 y h 2 Ixy 0 IP bh 2 (h 12 b2) 2 y B Rectangle (Origin of axes
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Chapter 11……….Contracts‚ Consideration‚ Capacity and Legality Consideration: Value given in return for a promise. Consideration must be (1) legally sufficient and (2) bargained for by the party receiving it. Legally sufficient consideration may take the form of: (1) promising to do something that the promisee has no prior legal duty to do (e.g.‚ promising to pay money for the promisor’s goods); Regular consideration (2) performing an action that the promisee is not otherwise obligated to
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Ethical considerations in the research of applied linguistics JIAN HE Monash University 1. Introduction In applied linguistics researches‚ there are unlikely considerable issues related to ethics or morality due to the harmlessness of the nature of language study. And in most cases‚ the participants are even able to get more or less some benefits from the research. For example‚ the participants may have an opportunity to gain certain knowledge of a target language via practicing
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