is $6 per unit‚ and the profit for product 2 is $4 per unit. a. Formulate a linear programming model for this problem. b. Solve this model by using graphical analysis. 6) The Pinewood Furniture Company produces chairs and tables from two resources-labor and wood. The company has 80 hours of labor and 36 pounds of wood available each day. Demand for chairs is limited to 6 per day. Each chair requires 8 hours of labor and 2 pounds of wood‚ whereas a table requires 10 hours of labor and 6 pounds
Premium Imperial units Assembly line Linear programming
1.3 1.4 Required: 1. For each month‚ compute the following operating performance measures: a. Throughput time. b. Manufacturing cycle efficiency (MCE). c. Delivery cycle time. 2. Using the performance measures given in the problem and those you computed in (1) above‚ do the following: a. Identify areas where the company seems to be improving. b. Identify areas where the company seems to be deteriorating or stagnating. c. Explain why you think some specific areas are
Premium Manufacturing Lean manufacturing Computer
to move outside your habitual thinking style‚ and helps you to get a more rounded view of a situation. This tool was created by Edward de Bono in his book ’6 Thinking Hats’. Many successful people think from a very rational‚ positive viewpoint. This is part of the reason that they are successful. Often‚ though‚ they may fail to look at a problem from an emotional‚ intuitive‚ creative or negative viewpoint. This can mean that they underestimate resistance to plans‚ fail to make creative leaps and do
Premium Six Thinking Hats Coloured hat Edward de Bono
CHAPTER 6 CASH TO ACCRUAL ACCOUNTING/ SINGLE ENTRY SYSTEM PROBLEMS 6-1. (BRAIN COMPANY) Capital‚ end Assets Less liabilities Capital‚ beginning Assets Less liabilities Increase in capital Additional investments Withdrawals Profit P609‚000 138‚000 P485‚000 94‚000 P471‚000 391‚000 P 80‚000 (70‚000) 120‚000 P130‚000 6-2. a. b. c. d. 6-3. 38‚900 + 13‚480 – 48‚200 = 4‚180 1‚160‚000 + 980‚000 – 700‚000 = 1‚440‚000 collections; 1‚440‚000 + 1‚660‚000 + 30‚000 – 1‚200‚000 = 1‚930‚000 210‚000 + 80‚000
Premium Generally Accepted Accounting Principles Balance sheet
Unit 6 questions Chapter 16: 1) Along with railroads‚ the Republicans’ protective tariffs helped build other U.S. industries‚ including textile and steel manufacturing in the Northeast and Midwest and (through a tariff on imported wool) sheep ranching in the West. Tariffs also funded government itself. Tariffs provided the largest share of revenue for the treasury‚ and helped fund the projects. 2) Farmers on the Great Plains faced the challenge of a hostile environment. In the grasslands‚ a cloud
Premium Labour movement
This movie’s name was “At Café 6”. One rainy day‚ a woman’s car broke down at the road side and she’s crying. A coffee shop owner helps her and bring her to his shop named Café 6. The woman told him that she had an argument with his boyfriend who lives overseas. The coffee shop owner think of his pass and he shares his story from his youth that happened in the summer of 1996. It is a romance film. Romance film is known as a romantic love stories that recorded in visual media for broadcast in theaters
Premium Love Love Actor
Chapter 6 Employee Testing and Selection Part Two | Recruitment and Placement Copyright © 2011 Pearson Education‚ Inc. publishing as Prentice Hall PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook The University of West Alabama “Selecting qualified employees is like putting money in the Bank” John Boudreau Selection • The process of choosing individuals who have relevant qualifications to fill jobs in an organization. • Selecting the appropriate set of knowledge‚ skills‚ and abilities (KSAs)—which come
Premium Employment Validity Psychometrics
gasses) entered the French market when Air Liquide (a French company in the same industry) decided to enter the U.S. market. Such a move is considered a ___.Answer | | | | | Selected Answer: | b. competitive driver | | | | | * Question 6 1 out of
Premium International trade Export
Exercise 6 Solution Chapter 6 Elasticity: The Responsiveness of Demand and Supply 6.1 The Price Elasticity of Demand and Its Measurement 1) Price elasticity of demand measures A) how responsive suppliers are to price changes. B) how responsive sales are to changes in the price of a related good. C) how responsive quantity demanded is to a change in price. D) how responsive sales are to a change in buyers’ incomes. Answer: C Comment: Recurring Diff: 1 Page
Premium Supply and demand Price elasticity of demand Elasticity
Research Problem Sources of Research Problems 1. Personal interest and observation 2. Pressing problem needing a solution 3. Other’s investigator’s theories and research 4. Literature in one’s field of specialization 5. Completed researches 6. Suggestions from colleagues and teachers Ways of Stating the Research Problem 1. Declarative or Descriptive Form- is used when stating the main problem of the study. 2. Question Form- is used when stating the sub-problems or specific
Premium Scientific method Research Problem solving