INEALSTIC DEMAND Student Name Institution Inelastic Demand Inelastic demand is a situation whereby a one per cent change in price of a commodity leads to less than one per cent change in quantity demanded by the consumers. Products that exhibit inelastic demand have an almost constant demand no matter the change in prices. Figure 1: Diagram illustrating inelastic demand As shown from diagram above‚ the price changes from P1 to P2 and quantity fall from Q1 to Q2. The
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2 CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF WINDOW 7 OPERATING SYSTEM Windows 7 is an operating system that was developed by Microsoft Corporation for computers (laptops‚ notebooks‚ home and business desktops PCs); it was released to the public 3 years after the release of Windows Vista operating system. Unlike Vista‚ Windows 7 is stable‚ faster and has more support for hardware. 2.1 MAIN FEATURES OF WINDOWS 7 OPERATING SYSTEM Action Center – This is a central place where we can view alerts and take
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OPERATING M86-02 8086 BASED MICROPROCESSOR --------------------------------------After power on the system we have the following text displayed on LCD. If the text is not displayed‚ press reset button. (Note reset always brings LCD to this initial position). Press enter to see the main menu as shown The following we describe the function of each command A= ASSEMBLE This command is used to convert input assembly language into the machine language. To activate simply press ‘A’ on main menu
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1.5 Modern OS are interrupt driven. Events are almost signaled by the occurrence of an interrupt or a trap‚ which caused either by an error or by a specific request from a user program that an OS service be performed .Dual-mode Operation allows OS to protect itself and other system components whereas Multimode Operation increasingly CPUs support multi-mode operations. System call provides the means for a user program to ask OS to perform OS tasks on the user program’s behalf. When a system callis
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Guide to UNIX Using Linux Fourth Edition Chapter 5 Solutions Answers to the Chapter 5 Review Questions 1. You have just finished a 25-page paper that you have written using Emacs. The file containing the paper is called /assignments/data_sources. After your instructor has briefly looked at the paper‚ she recommends that you change all instances of the reference “data is” to “data are” before you submit it. Which of the following commands can you use to locate these references in the
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According to the results‚ there was no significant difference between the filtered 100% water composition‚ and the filtered 90% water 10% soap composition. However‚ based on fFigure 2‚ the Average of Absorbance graph‚ showed that growth of the algae for the 100% water composition was observed to be slightly higher than the 90% water 10% soap composition. Meaning the soap may have slightly affected the growth of the algae‚ in some way. One possible‚ reason for a slightly higher growth for the filtered
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Demand Varies by Market Segment Random fluctuations usually are caused by factors beyond management control. However analysis will sometimes reveal that a predictable demand cycle for one segment is concealed within a broader‚ seemingly random pattern. This fact illustrates the importance of breaking down demands on a “segment-by-segment” basis. For instance‚ a repair and maintenance shop that services industrial electrical equipment may already know a certain proportion of its work consists of
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ECON 1. (Demand Under Perfect Competition) what type of demand curve does a perfectly competitive firm face? Why? A horizontal or a perfectly elastic‚ demand curve. A perfectly competitive firm is called a price taker because that firm must “take‚” or accept‚ the market price- as in “take it or leave it.” 2. Explain the different options a firm has to minimize losses in the short run. A firm in perfect competition has no control over the market place. Sometimes that price may be so low
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quantity of foreign exchange‚ and the effects of Federal Reserve policy b. influence of government policy‚ the number of qualified buyers‚ and the effect of generally accepted accounting principles c. number of buyers and sellers‚ whether the product is standardized‚ whether there is free entry and exit‚ and how well informed the buyers and sellers are about the market d. volume of discounts‚ the effect of generally accepted accounting principles‚ and Federal Reserve policy e. influence of
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Assignment 1: Learning Curve “A” Case Assignment questions 1. 10.8 – 6 = 4.8 6 hours for one unit x .8 = 4.8 learning curve therefore is 80% 10.8 x .8 = 8.64 / 2 units = 4.32 average hours per unit 19.2 x .8 = 15.36 / 4 units = 3.84 average hours per unit 35.2 x .8 = 28.16 / 8 units = 3.52 average hours per unit 64 x .8 = 51.2 / 16 units = 3.2 average hours per unit 115.2 x .8 = 92.16 / 32 units = 2.88 average hours per unit
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