LAB 14 REMOTE WINDOWS 7 ADMINISTRATION This lab contains the following exercises and activities: Exercise 14.1 Creating a Custom MMC Console Exercise 14.2 Configuring Remote Desktop Access Exercise 14.3 Connecting to a Remote Workstation Exercise 14.4 Creating an RDP File Lab Challenge 14.1 Using Windows Remote Management SCENARIO You are a newly hired desktop technician for Contoso‚ Ltd.‚ working on a long- term test deployment of new Windows 7 workstations. You have been given the
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Exercise 1: Cell Transport Mechanisms and Permeability: Activity 2: Simulated Facilitated Diffusion Lab Report Pre-lab Quiz Results You scored 50% by answering 2 out of 4 questions correctly. 1. Molecules need a carrier protein to help them move across a membrane because Your answer : a. they are not lipid soluble. Correct answer: d. they are lipid insoluble or they are too large. 2. Which of the following is true of facilitated diffusion? You correctly answered: c. Movement is passive and down
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MACROMOLECULS LAB: What are the mystery powders? Period: 4 Asia Enoch Introduction: A carbohydrate is an immediate form of energy in your body. Monomers is smaller than a polymer. For carbohydrate the monomer is sugar and the polymer is a polysaccharides. Carbohydrates are important to our body because we need to use energy. The purpose of this lab is to figure which one is the monomer and which one is the polymer. Hypothesis: If I place two drops of iodine into the mystery powder‚ it
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Iker Lopez Anatomy & Physiology P2 Wednesday‚ September 19‚ 2012 Heart Rate Response to Baroreceptor Feedback Lab Fundamental Question: Does the body respond to its environment? Testable Question: When the body is in the squat position to normal while the time limit stays the same and how far you squat is the same‚ will the heart rate recover after returning to standing position in 10 seconds? Hypothesis: If the body moves back to normal position from squatting position while the time limit
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Student Guide Laboratory: Drop and Bounce Different matter responds differently to force. In this lab‚ you will explore the relationship between matter and energy by dropping objects made of different materials from different heights to see how high they bounce. You will be dropping these objects in a virtual lab setting where objects behave the same as they would in the real world. Goals for the Lesson Solve a problem using the scientific method. Use the metric system in a scientific experiment
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certain task. In this lab we examined motor unit recruitment and muscle fatigue by electromyography (EMG) with dynamometry (DYN). When the motor unit in the muscle is activated signals are then generated‚ which result in muscle contraction. The impulse generated are a bit weak‚ yet can still be detected by the electrodes‚ EMG and is coupled by a measurements of power‚ DYN. When all the motor units reach its maximum strength the muscles will fatigue. Finally‚ the objectives of this lab were to determine
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Procedure Access the virtual lab and complete the experiments. Part One (Flame Test): 1. Create and complete a data table for Part One of the lab. It should include the name of the element (or unknown) examined and the color of the observed flame: Barium-green Calcium-red Sodium-yellow Rubidium-purple Potassium-blue Lithium-pink 2. Identify each unknown from Part One of the lab and briefly explain why you identified each unknown as you did.: Unknown 1-yellow. I think it is Sodium because
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of dots/ time‚ and then calculate the period using formula Period(T)= per unit time/ frequency. Procedure: 1. Follow instructions and assemble the apparatus. 1. Put a carbon paper disc which is carbon-side-up on the fix shaft between the gates. 2. Place a short strip of timer tape in the recording timer over the paper disc. 3. Make sure the tape is threaded through the gates and is free of snags. 4. Turn the timer on and pull the strip through the gates. 5. Make sure you are getting dots on
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Flame Lab Objective: How an electron absorbs energy and re-emits it as light and why different elements have different spectra. Also to learn how to use flame tests to determine the identity of unknown mixtures. Hypothesis: We know that certain compounds will burn certain flame colors because they emit different wave lengths. Introduction: Neils Bohr made the “Bohr’s Model” in 1922‚ he found that electron travel in specified fields – which‚ when excited‚ will jump to different rings
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Lab Report: Toothpickase and Enzymes September 19‚ 2012 Olivia DePhillips Lab Partner: Joy Morgan Meyers Signature: Introduction Enzymes are biological molecules that catalyze chemical reactions. In enzymatic reactions‚ the molecules at the beginning of the process‚ called substrates‚ are converted into different molecules‚ called products. Almost all chemical reactions in a biological cell need enzymes in order to occur at rates sufficient for life. Like all catalysts‚ enzymes work
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