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write my assignment 7239

A Book is Good if it satisfies the following conditions: It has more than 100 pages and Its title must not end with the character ‘s’. If title ends wih the character ‘e’, then should not start with character ‘a’ The publisher of the book must be one of “Niho books”, “DreamWorldz”, “Pogo Books” and “Diamond Comics” The number of authors must be greater than 2. But if “CK Bose” is one of the authors, then this conditon is not required. If “Pran” is one of the authors, the publisher must be “Diamond comics”. There should be atleast 10 pages per rupee cost of the book. Write a method: boolean isGoodBook(String title, String publisher, int numPages, float price, String[] authors) title The title of the book publisher Name of the publisher of the book. numPages Number of pages in the book. price Price of the book in rupees. authors A string array containing the list of authors.

 

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write my assignment 19641

I will pay 75.00 dollars for the following 2 part assignment. Unit 1 Journal does not require citations, Unit I Article Review does require citations.

Unit 1 Journal

As we begin this course, journal what your perception is of project management. Explain how you have seen it effectively or ineffectively used within organizations in which you have worked or been associated.

Your journal entry must be at least 200 words. No references or citations are necessary.

___________________________________________________________________________

Unit I Article Review

Locate an article that discusses project management through organizational processes and efficiencies. This could include project scope, project constraints, stakeholders, global project management, or anything associated with the project management process.

Note that these are simply ideas; please expand upon the topics within the scope of the management of organizational efficiencies. Chapter 1 of the textbook will also provide additional ideas for topics.

Respond to the writing prompts below.

1 Explain how the topic of this article relates to project management.

2 Analyze how project management brings efficiencies to a project manager and ultimately the company.

3 Describe how this article uses project management concepts to more efficiently complete business projects.

4 Explain how constraints within the business could lead to performance issues with respect to successful implementation of project management concepts.

Your response should be a minimum of two pages in length and be double-spaced. References should include the reference for your article of choice and at least one additional credible reference. All sources used must be referenced; paraphrased and quoted material must have accompanying citations and be cited per APA guidelines.

 

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write my assignment 31173

Chapter 3

EVALUATING A COMPANY’S EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT

The arrival of a new technology can simultaneously represent both a threat and an opportunity.

For example, the Internet has given rise to wholly new business models and has helped some

firms well-equipped to meet the online revolution rise while companies ill-equipped to cope with

this disruptive technology falter and fail. One particular new technology may prove similarly

disruptive in the coming years – consumer-accessible three-dimensional (3-D) printing. (If you

are not familiar with 3-D printing, an explanation can be found at

http:// read the information below and perform a Five Forces analysis for the toy industry as

it currently stands. Next, tell how the proliferation of consumer-accessible 3-D printing

could affect each of these five forces. Include what you believe are the potential opportunities

and threats that the spread of consumer-accessible 3-D printing technology poses to incumbent

firms (those already competing within the toy industry) and to new entrants (those contemplating

competing within the toy industry). Then, discuss the potential effect that 3-D printing can

have on another industry other than the toy industry; explain the manner in which 3-D

printing can both harm and enhance aspects of that industry.

Business Day Personal Tech

3-D Printers to Make Things You Need or Like

Tony Cenicola/The New York Times

By AMY O’LEARY

Published: June 19, 2013

You may have seen some odd-shaped plastic trinkets on someone’s desk or heard about the first shots fired a few weeks ago from a 3-D printed gun. With every new 3-D printed object, the world seems to be getting closer to a future where we can “print out” objects like furniture, clothing, human tissue and even buildings. NASA even recently invested in technology to print food. The possibilities are staggering. Multimedia Why, then, do even the most ardent 3-D printing evangelists show off this brave new world with dull-as-nails examples? Dishwasher knobs. Dimmer switches. Replacement parts for laundry carts. Is that all there is? “That’s the million-dollar question,” said Alyssa Reichental, who works at 3D Systems and showed off the company’s Cube printer at a recent trade show in New York. Right now, it seems, 3-D printing is more about the technology’s potential than anything practical. After some thought, she added, “We see it as more of a lifestyle.” The technology behind 3-D printing has been used in commercial manufacturing for decades, but home machines from companies like 3D Systems, MakerBot andAfinia have opened up the technology to more users in the last few years. Hobbyists and tinkerers have embraced the technology first, buying consumer models for anywhere from $300 for a kit you can assemble at home to $4,000 for a printer of almost professional quality. Most 3-D printers work by threading spools of plastic filament onto a heated nozzle that drops liquid plastic onto a surface one layer at a time until an object, typically no bigger than a grapefruit, is formed. Filament can typically run from $30 to $50 a spool. If you want to dip into the world of printables, it may be wise to begin your experiments alongside an enthusiastic hobbyist or professional who can guide you. Manyhackerspaces make 3-D printers available as part of their memberships. Some libraries around the country have begun offering 3-D printers and coaching help. Soon, Staples will offer a 3-D printing service in its stores, using a full-color process from the Irish company MCor Technologies that makes items out of paper instead of plastic. It has already introduced the technology in Europe. This month, Amazon began selling 3-D printers and accessories.

As 3-D printing begins to show its promise, here are five categories where it makes good sense to get started. CUSTOMIZE CHEAPLY In the land of 3-D printing, you do not have to settle for a bland, boring “World’s No. 1 Mom” mug anymore, not when you can produce a sculptural model, in plastic, of your mother’s head for pennies. And why stop there? You can make personalized wedding cake toppers, even Star Trek figurines in your likeness. Many “cloud printing” services, like Shapeways, Kraftwurx, iMaterialise or Cubify, offer templates that let you design or customize objects online. Those designs are then printed on industrial machines offering more colors and materials than you could afford at home, and are mailed to your door. Many of these personalized products have all the subtlety and class of a license plate screaming, “ILUV3D,” but they clearly show the advantages of 3-D printing. While there are many clunkers in this category (customizable Santa-in-the-bathroom-figurine, anyone?), there are a few charmers. Crayon Creatures offers to turn any child’s drawing into a three-dimensional toy (for a not-so-child-friendly price of $130). And for urban cowboys, personal branding irons that cleverly attach to a standard Bic lighter are available for $23.60. WIN THE PLASTIC PART BATTLE There are few greater frustrations than when a tiny plastic part breaks and your blender — or whatever — no longer works. The part may be cheap, but if you cannot find it, the world suddenly feels as if there’s a conspiracy by Big Plastic to keep you buying blenders. Online, you can find a wide array of designs for little parts, from nuts to bolts to washers, available in design libraries like Thingiverse, whose repository is growing every day. Need a coat hook for your Volvo C30? How about a part for that Bugaboo stroller? The designs are already available for download, along with more than 175 replacement or repair parts for Ikea products. Someone has even created a design for lost Scrabble tiles. Beyond the satisfaction of repairing your own things, there is also the cost savings. Vintage car buffs are a niche group that has found real advantages to 3-D printing. Ryan McMaster, a mechanical engineer in Reno, Nev., said he used 3-D printing to help his mother restore her 1966 Mustang Coupe. “All those little parts on those cars, they charge an arm and a leg for them,” he said. Now, he simply makes his own.

MAKE YOUR OWN ADAPTERS Both Duplo and Brio make charming wooden train sets for children. Their track sets, however, are not compatible. You can be a Brio family or a Duplo family, but not both. One of the most ingenious applications of 3-D printing is the ability to make your own adapters for these kinds of products, as one man in Brooklyn has done. Online design libraries are full of connectors and adapters that merge products that were never meant to be used together. Nearly 400 online 3-D printer designs exist for Lego-compatible products alone. A man in Moscow had a Canon camera and an old Soviet-era Helios lens. He printed a custom adapter that allowed him to connect the two. Other photographers have found that expensive hardware can be replaced with cheaper homemade versions. Brackets, mounts, gimbals and housings can be printed at Shapeways.com for $5 to $20. Comparable products in stores can easily cost three times more. Mr. McMaster, the mechanical engineer helping his mother restore her car, also moonlights as a professional photographer. Out of the 1,000 objects he has printed in the last few years, he said, he has saved the most money printing these kinds of photo accessories. SPREAD 3-D KNOWLEDGE Beyond the recently released designs for “The Liberator,” a 3-D printed gun made almost entirely out of plastic, there are a number of ways to test the limits of intellectual property — if that’s your thing. The sale of lawn darts, for instance, was banned in the United States in 1988, but you can find 3-D printer designs for them online. (The designer cautions common sense. “Don’t make this if you’re a moron,” he writes. “They were banned for a reason.”) Other designers have uploaded mock copies of Google Glass and imitation Livestrong bracelets, for either parody or entertainment purposes. But sharing physical “information” doesn’t always have to mean infringing on someone’s design. Mary-Margaret Murphy, a graduate student in anthropology at the University of Montana, is investigating how to use 3-D printing to replicate grizzly bear skulls (and eventually human ones, too), so scientists can share models of otherwise fragile and rare artifacts anyplace in the world. PROTOTYPE, INVENT AND LEARN For people who like to tinker, build prototypes and invent things, 3-D printing provides a fast track to making stuff. Early adopters include

professionals like jewelry designers, architects and scientists. But right now, the best possible application for 3-D printing may be in the brains of the people who are using it. A recent 3-D printing conference in New York was as flooded by teachers as it was by engineers. And most enthusiasts agree that the technology is about much more than objects. “It’s not about printing. It’s about how you start to look at the world,” said Justin Levinson, a technology consultant in New York, who has been using 3-D printing for several years. “You start to think, ‘I can solve my own problems.’ ” If you are ready to do that, an simple, dependable machine is the best place to start. Two standouts are the Afinia H-Series ($1,599) or the Cube printer from 3-D systems ($1,299). Both were judged as among the most reliable and easy to use in a comprehensive test of printers last year compiled by Make Magazine. Whatever you make is up to you. Perhaps in enough time someone will figure out the million dollar idea that will make 3-D printers so vital and necessary that it will be hard to imagine a time when we only made quirky plastic paperweights and iPhone cases, it will be hard to imagine a time when we asked, “what else is 3-D printing good for?”

 

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write my assignment 28968

Marlow Barrons is a nurse on vacation in Alaska. After fishing all day, she and her friends are unloading their boat when an emergency call comes to the Coast Guard. She overhears them discussing that a professional fisherman has amputated his arm in the gears of his boat. She tells them she is a nurse and offers assistance. Her offer is accepted, she boards the Coast Guard boat, and they speed off to the site of the accident. 

What signs and symptoms can Marlow anticipate seeing based on the report of the accident? 

What type of first aid should she anticipate the victim will need? 

Are there special considerations regarding the amputated arm? 

*** 

John Street is a health care student and is feeling the need to get away from the stress and routine of studying. He decides to take a hike in the local mountains with his friends. As they ascend the mountain, it gets cooler and begins to rain. One of the hikers, Paul, starts to lag behind. Paul has always been a slower climber, so they continue on. A little while later, John turns around to see how Paul is doing and can no longer see him. John backtracks and finds Paul sitting beside the trail. He is shivering and his skin is cold to the touch. Paul says he is just very tired and needs to rest for a while and that he will catch up later. 

Should John leave Paul to rest by himself? 

What may be happening to Paul? 

What first aid, if any, should be given to Paul? 

***

 Lack of information and failure to communicate are common causes of workplace conflict. Hank Stuart is experiencing a situation that really has him upset. He is a physical therapist assistant at a busy sports medicine clinic. He also has an interest in computers and worked in a large computer retail store while he went to school. It did not surprise Hank when one of the owners of the clinic, Kathy Chin, asked him to gather information about computer systems and software that could be used for patient management. Hank spent several hours of both work and personal time and gave his recommendation last week. It was then that he discovered that a system had already been purchased. The clinic’s other owner had assigned the computer research task to another employee. Upset that his time and ideas were wasted, Hank has let everyone know just how disorganized and unfair his employers are. His coworkers are tired of hearing about it and wish Hank would just forget it. 

Do you believe that Hank’s reaction to the situation is appropriate? Why or why not? 

How can he better deal with the situation? 

What action would you recommend that he take? 

*** 

Fran Nichols is angry. She can’t believe what happened at work today and how unfairly she was treated by her supervisor, Dan Watson, RN. Dan has been on her case from the beginning, always criticizing her work. But she never thought he would actually fire her. Working an 8-hour shift as a nursing assistant is hard work, and it only makes sense to take some shortcuts to completed all the duties. The safety precautions that Dan insisted on were very time consuming and really didn’t seem necessary. After all, the patients she worked with didn’t have acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) or anything, so it didn’t really make sense to go to so much trouble with gloves and special waste disposal and so on. 

Based on the information given, do you believe that Fran’s dismissal was fair? Explain your answer. 

What would you advise Fran if she wants to continue to pursue a career in health care?

 

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