Business Modelling for Decision Making Version 1.0 Flexible Learning Helping you bring Learning to Life Published by The University of Sunderland The publisher endeavours to ensure that all its materials are free from bias or discrimination on grounds of religious or political belief‚ gender‚ race or physical ability. These course materials are produced from paper derived from sustainable forests where the replacement rate exceeds consumption. The copying‚ storage in any retrieval system
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Accounting ✓ Development of Accounting Standard ✓ Purpose of Accounting ✓ Nature and Characteristics of Accounting ✓ Accounting as a Language of Business ✓ Distinction between Accounting and Bookkeeping ✓ Financial Accounting Vs Management Accounting ✓ Accounting Practice in Bangladesh ✓ Accounting Profession in Accounting Field ✓ Accounting Ethics ✓ History of Accounting ✓ Definition of Accounting Accounting is identifying
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Financial Management Corporations: Create money Shareholders * board of directors * 7-10 people * corporate governance * monitor the manager’s performance * Sub committees * auditor commitee * compensation committee * buffer between shareholders and the managers CFO * strategic financial decisions * Spending money: how the money is spent * financial investment projects * capital budgeting
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Molecular modelling is the general term used to describe the use of computers to construct molecules and perform a variety of calculations on these molecules in order to predict their chemical characteristics and behaviour. The term molecular modelling is often used synonymously with the term computational chemistry. Computational chemistry is a broader term‚ referring to any use of computers to study chemical systems. Some chemists use the term computational quantum chemistry to refer to the use
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MOBILE COMPUTING Chapter 1: Outline 1.1 Introduction to Mobile Computing 1.2 Radio Propagation 1.3 Antennas 1.4 Cellular Systems 1.5 Wireless Link Characteristics ERIC SAVIOUR ARYEE OKAI OCT‚2013 MOBILE COMPUTING 1.1 INTRODUCTION What is Mobile Computing? Mobile Computing is a technology that allows transmission of data‚ voice and video via a computer or any other wireless enabled device without having to be connected to a fixed physical link. ERIC SAVIOUR ARYEE OKAI OCT
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Lecture 1‚ 9 January 2014 -Pre-crash orthodoxies Draft: I.INTRODUCTION Students at Manchester University and elsewhere have been demanding to be taught ‘post-crash economics’. I want to start this set of six lectures with an account of pre-crash orthodoxies -the theories which underpinned economic policy till 2008; the orthodoxies students are still taught. In my next lecture I tell how the unforeseen crisis caused politicians and policy-makers to jettison these orthodoxies in saving the world from
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Command Prompt Window Status Bar Figure 1. AutoCAD Interface USING THE MOUSE IN AutoCAD Right Button: Enter or Short Cut Menu To repeat the previous command To end repeating prompts Scroll Button: To zoom in‚ zoom out
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1) The correct sequence of levels forming the structural hierarchy is Chemical‚ cellular‚ tissue‚ organ‚ organ system‚ organismal 2) The structural and functional unit of life is a cell 3) Which of the following is a major functional characteristic of all organisms? Movement‚ growth‚ metabolism‚ responsiveness. 4) Two of these organ systems bear the major responsibility for ensuring homeostasis of the internal environment. Nervous system and endocrine system 5) In (a)-(e)‚ a directional term
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Discrete-event System Simulation J. Banks‚ J.S. Carson and B.L. Nelson Prentice Hall International‚ 1994 SIMULATION AND MODELLING Tony Field and Jeremy Bradley {ajf‚jb}@doc.ic.ac.uk • Simulation Modeling and Analysis A.M. Law and W.D. Kelton McGraw Hill‚ 2000 • Probabilistic Modelling I. Mitrani Cambridge University Press‚ 1998 1 2 • A Compositional Approach to Performance Modelling (first three chapters) J. Hillston Cambridge University Press‚ 1996. On-line at: http://www.doc.ic.ac.uk/ jb/teaching/336/1994hillston-thesis
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Business Modelling Revision Mutually exclusive event- add the probabilities together to find the probability that one or other of the events will occur. E.g men/woman P(A or B)= P(A)+P(B) Non mutually exclusive- shared characteristic P (A or B)= P(A) + P(B) – P(B+A) Independent events – outcome is known to have no effect on another outcome P (A+B) = P(A) X P(B) Dependant events- outcome of one event affects the probability of the outcome of the other. Probability of the second event said to be dependent
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