...Arctic Mining Consultants (Case Study) Tom Parker enjoyed working outdoors. At various times in the past, he worked as a ranch hand, high steel rigger, headstone installer, prospector, and geological field technician. Now 43, Parker is a geological field technician and field coordinator with Arctic Mining Consultants. He has specialized knowledge and experience in all nontechnical aspects of mineral exploration, including claim staking, line cutting and grid installation, soil sampling, prospecting, and trenching. He is responsible for hiring, training, and supervising field assistants for all of Arctic Mining Consultants' programs. Field assistants are paid a fairly low daily wage (no matter how long they work, which may be up to 12 hours or more) but are provided meals and accommodation. Many of the programs are operated by a project manager who reports to Parker. Parker sometimes acts as a project manager , as he did on a job that involved staking 15 claims near Eagle Lake, Alaska. He selected John Talbot, Greg Boyce, and Brian Millar, all of whom had previously worked with Parker, as the field assistants. To stake a claim, the project team marks a line with flagging tape and blazes along the perimeter of the claim, cutting a claim post every 500 yards (called a length). The 15 claims would require almost 60 miles of line in total. Parker had budgeted seven days (plus mobilization and demobilization) to complete the job. This meant that each of the four stakers (Parker, Talbot,...
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...04/14/13 Abstract Social networking sites are growing at a very fast rate. This paper discusses three possible marketing opportunities and risks associated with each opportunity of the three leading social networking sites: Facebook, Myspace, and LinkedIn. This paper will also assesses the public relations effect on the company, and the financial improvement that is due to each of the marketing opportunity’s. Based on the assessment, one marketing opportunity is recommended for each of the three companies. Facebook Facebook, the most well known social networking site, was started in 2004. Today, Facebook has over 800 million clients. (Eldon, 2008) The First Marketing Opportunity : Sell advertisement space. This advertising chance is classified as low hanging fruit. The No. of clients on Facebook surpassed the 1 billion mark by August 2012. (Bradley, 2012) Facebook can show advertisement to correlated clients dependent upon their demographics and engages. Promoting on Facebook is more successful as associations can achieve their target clients. Risk: Many users may consider this as violation of privacy. Second Marketing Opportunity : Introduce paid membership This marketing opportunity is single. Facebook has this elevated no. of clients in light of the fact that Facebook offers unlimited aids. Association can limit access to certain offers (like film imparting, review others photograph and what not). The aforementioned characteristics...
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...with the criteria that n > m, then at least one container will hold more than one item. (Herstein, 1964) Another way to explain this principle in a more quantitative way would be to say that for natural numbers k and m, if n = km + 1 objects are distributed among m sets, then the pigeonhole principle asserts that at least one of the sets will contain at least k + 1 objects. (Youtube) This pigeonhole principle can...
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...by Salman Rushdie, is a short story about two normal and similar elderly men living two normal and similar lives. Senior and Junior had drastically different backgrounds growing up, yet they somehow ended up in the same place together during their mature age. Their lives together were simply ordinary, but one day everything changes when the younger of the two men, Junior, falls and dies. The story illustrates the possibility of chance through irony as well as multiple foreshadowing and flashback events leading to the climax of Junior’s death. Chance has the ability to create unity through similarities, and to destroy unity through differences. It is ironic that with the two vastly different outlooks on life between...
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...and Sam both have natural talents to become surgeons, however, they are not equally as likely to succeed. There are many factors as to why one may be more likely to succeed than the other based on their social class. As stated in our textbook, social class studies the inequality that results from social relationships. Society has a stratification system. As discussed in class, stratification is the classification of individuals and ranking, on an inferiority and superiority scale. Individuals such as Taylor and Sam, are stratified by neighborhood, income, education, and more. With these classifications, society is able to determine who has a better chance in life. Referring back to our class discussion on Max Weber, his concept of “Life Chances” gives reasoning as to why Taylor has a better chance of succeeding than Sam. His concept states that “Life chances are opportunities an individual has of fulfilling their potential in life.” This means that individuals ranked higher in the stratification system have better “Life Chances”, than those ranked lower. Taking a look at Taylor and Sam’s neighborhood background, Sam is from a small town in rural Arkansas as compared to Taylor who is from Naperville, an upper- middle class suburb of Chicago. Taylor’s neighborhood have more stability such as services, recreational programs, and access to more things than Sam’s, whose neighborhood will have less stability. Based on their neighborhood background, Sam is less likely to succeed than...
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...Do Inmates Deserve a Second Chance? Cari Adee, James Crooms, Latandra Sain, Taylor Cotter, Rodney Henry, Breanna Johnson, Latonia Pitts BCOM/275 7/20/2014 Do inmates deserve a second chance? Every time that you turn on the news you see it: School shootings, babies being left in the car by parents, people selling and doing drugs, people being murdered, raped and assaulted. According to the inter press services, in the last three decades people that are in prison have increased almost 790 percent, in the last 30 years the inmates count has risen from 25,000 to 219,000 and is still rising at a disrupting rate. The question that we need to ask ourselves is if the people that get out of prison deserve a second chance at a normal life. Everyone has a different opinion on this topic. Some people will agree that once a person serves time for the crime that they committed then they deserve a chance to start over. While others think that those who committed a crime should have thought about their actions before they did the things that they did. This paper will not just go over to the pros of why inmates deserve a second chance but the cons as well, in hopes that whoever reads this paper will make their own judgments based on all the information and not just part of the evidence. There are many pros for why a criminal deserves a second chance at life. For instance, many criminals have families that are in need of their assistance, financially, physically, and emotionally. There...
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...raised by $10,000. In deciding whether I should call the bet or fold, I will need to look at the likelihood of getting a better hand than my opponent. There are 52 cards in a deck and seven have already been dealt. My opponent currently has three of a kind. The simplest way for me to beat that hand is to get a straight. In order to achieve this, the one of the final two community cards needs to be an eight. No eight has been dealt. The odds of an eight being dealt are 4 in 45 and 4 in 44, respectively over the next two community cards. Overall, the odds of this occurring is 1 in 11.125, an 8.99% chance. This will allow me to beat my opponent’s three of a kind. However, I have the potential for an even better hand. Currently, I have two diamond cards and there are two diamond cards within the community cards. One more diamond card and I would have a Flush, which is one hand better than a straight and two hands better than a three of a kind. There are a total of 13 diamond cards. Four have been dealt, leaving 9. The odds that they are dealt are 9 in 45 and 9 in 44. That is 9 in 44.5, or a 20.22% chance. There is only a 2.25% chance of my opponent getting a four of a kind. However, my opponent could get a full house, which would beat a straight and a flush. My opponent will get a full house if a three or a four is thrown. There are six of these cards left in the deck. The odds of the community card giving the opponent a full house are 6 in 45, and 6 in 44. That...
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...often organized by the state or a charity in order to make money, in which tickets with numbers are sold to people who then have a chance of winning a prize if their number is chosen. Lottery" means any game, method, scheme or device whereby money or money's worth is distributed or allotted in any manner depending upon or to be determined by chance or lot.- According to Lotteries Act (Act 288) (Malaysia), According to Lotteries Act (Act 288) (Malaysia), there are two types of lottery: 1. Private lottery" means a lottery which is promoted for, and in which the sale or distribution of tickets or chances is confined to members of one society established and conducted for purposes not connected with gaming, wagering or lotteries 2. Public lottery" means a lottery to which the public or any section thereof has or may have access; Meanwhile according to Gambling Act 2005 (UK): An arrangement is a simple lottery if there is an arrangement and the persons are required to pay in other to participate. Besides, there is one or more prizes are allocated to one or more members of a class in the course of that arrangement. The participants are wholly relying on chance to win the prizes allocated. An arrangement is a complex lottery if the persons are required to pay in if they want to participate in the arrangement. There is one or more prizes provided for one or more members of the class in the course of the arrangement. The prizes are provided and arranged by a series of processes, and...
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...of antiquity. Spreadsheets are shaming football coaches into rolling the dice more often on fourth downs. But for many American fans tuning into the World Cup, soccer’s nuggets of analytic insight remain as foreign as the game itself. There are set pieces to orchestrate, attacking strategies to plan, areas of the defense to exploit — and it isn’t always apparent which tactics are best. But analytics has clear advice on how to do some things right. Soccer analytics is very much viewed as a discipline in its infancy. And the sport itself is often described as especially resistant to the pull of number-crunching, whether due to its fluid nature, its sportocratic establishment culture, or a fear that the un-sentimentality of data will rob the Beautiful Game of its celebrated elegance. There’s not much truth to that. Off and on, people have been tracking relatively detailed soccer data in some form for more than six decades, up to and including the modern companies that exhaustively log every event on the pitch. (2) The beautiful game has always been resistant to numerical representation, at least beyond the almighty scoreboard. But that's changing. Slowly yet surely, numbers have crept into how we talk and think about soccer. Once, there were goals. Then assists came along. Now there are saves, clearances, blocks, interceptions, punches, punts, the always-controversial stat of "possession" and more. All...
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...Fate, chance, and free will has no boundaries when it comes to love. These themes can make people in love reach high, however sometimes they can also lead to their ruin. The actions which come from fate, chance, and free will can be drastic when it comes to love, and because of this the outcome can vary from happily ever after to tragedy. In the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare fate, chance, and free will play a major role throughout the tragic love story. Not only are these themes seen all through the play but they are particularly seen in their deaths. Fate was a main theme in the play including their deaths. There are multiple examples of fate having a hand in their deaths. One example of fate leading to their deaths is that they were fated to meet and fall in love, however due to their families feud their love was fated to not work out. This means that from the beginning their love was doomed to fail, since they loved each other more than anything else the only way for it to fail would be for them to die. Another example would be that once Juliet took the sleepy potion...
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...the conglomeration, the chances confronting the conglomeration, and the dangers confronting the conglomeration. It is one of the foundation explanatory devices to assist a conglomeration improve a favored future. It is one of the time tried apparatuses that has the ability to empower a conglomeration to comprehend itself. To react viably to updates in nature's turf, we should grasp our outside and inward connections so we can advance a dream and a method that connection the two. We have to weave together our comprehension of our conglomeration and our movements to advance a destiny. The motivation behind the Swot dissection is to give informative content on our qualities and shortcomings in connection to the chances and dangers we confront. When the Swot dissection is lacking nothing, it will then be a great opportunity to assemble everything and look nearly to structure a methodology. This will include how you can abuse the Opportunities and how to take out or manage the Threats. This may well hinge on upon your association's unique destinations and objectives yet the entire methodology will surely give a general take a gander at the present position of your business. You may contend that you can make a record in your mind about the regions that make up your dissection and that no profit could be determined from a Swot activity. Attempt a fast record with the four regions and recognize where one territory effects on another. Provided that you discover one occurrence that is a present...
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...LII. An Essay towards solving a Problem in the Doctrine of Chances. By the late Rev. Mr. Bayes, communicated by Mr. Price, in a letter to John Canton, M. A. and F. R. S. Dear Sir, Read Dec. 23, 1763. I now send you an essay which I have found among the papers of our deceased friend Mr. Bayes, and which, in my opinion, has great merit, and well deserves to be preserved. Experimental philosophy, you will find, is nearly interested in the subject of it; and on this account there seems to be particular reason for thinking that a communication of it to the Royal Society cannot be improper. He had, you know, the honour of being a member of that illustrious Society, and was much esteemed by many as a very able mathematician. In an introduction which he has writ to this Essay, he says, that his design at first in thinking on the subject of it was, to find out a method by which we might judge concerning the probability that an event has to happen, in given circumstances, upon supposition that we know nothing concerning it but that, under the same circumstances, it has happened a certain number of times, and failed a certain other number of times. He adds, that he soon perceived that it would not be very difficult to do this, provided some rule could be found, according to which we ought to estimate the chance that the probability for the happening of an event perfectly unknown, should lie between any two named degrees of probability, antecedently to any experiments made about it; and that...
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...Women’s Social Mobility in the United States of America We live in a world full of obstacles where it’s said that the one who is born poor will remain poor. Like many other country in the world the United States of America is also struggling with the difficulties regarding social mobility. The American dream is that the poorest suburban person can be a rich person too and America is the home and land of unlimited possibilities. The main idea is that if you work hard enough you can make it to the top. Is it true for everyone? Can women make it to the top? But before I start my essay on Women’s Social Mobility in the United States of America let me clarity certain definitions. The concept of social mobility has two main meanings: a) in the narrow sense, represents the moving in a stratification system, b) broadly refers to the space movement (territorial mobility) and / or change of employment (or mobility fluctuation labor). Studies (theoretical and empirical) say that social mobility can be placed in three categories: - those using a hierarchy criteria, tracking movements between strictly hierarchical layers. It’s the American tradition, which uses the social status as a hierarchical criteria. - those who use as a classification criteria exclusively the individual’s occupation, this leading to the establishment of a social space consisting some number of socio-professional categories: tradition - those using as a criteria social classes and social strata. Here fall particularly...
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...experiences and lifestyles. Yet, in the end, both characters life turned out completely different. One becoming a Rhode scholar and the other in jail for the rest of his life. One page 67, the author Wes wrote, “ I guess it's hard sometimes to distinguish between second chances and last chance.” Both Wes Moores had second chances in their life and could of redeemed themselves easily. But the difference between the two realistic characters was the author Wes Moore, took the the second chance as a gift and the other Wes Moore, just took advantage of it and let it slip away. Overall, both Wes Moore’s received many second chances that affected both in different ways. To start off, the author...
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...PLAN COMPANY OVERVIEW Owner(s): Alan J Klingensmith Company Name: Recycled Chances Product Name: Non-Profit Location: Oviedo, Florida History (yrs.): 1 SECTION 1: EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The five-year marketing plan for Recycled Chances has been developed by its original founders to secure additional funding for growth and to inform supporters of the company’s current status and direction. Although Recycled Chances has only been recently launched, Recycled Chances has experienced greater-than-anticipated support. Recycled Chances plans to explore online fundraising opportunities. Over the next five years Recycled Chances can increase its recognition and win new supporters. PRODUCT DESCRIPTION Recycled Chances was founded by a husband and wife team, Alan and Heidi Klingensmith. Alan is a Marine Corps veteran and has a bachelor’s degree in Business Management. Heidi has worked as a human resource director for over eight years. As a family they decided they wanted to start making the world a better place. Recycled Chances reflects the passion they both share in recycling for the environment benefits and wanting to help those less fortunate. They believe that with the added support, a person can successfully turn their life around. Recycled Chances builds all their housing and community buildings out of used water bottles, dirt and other recycled goods. This allows Recycled Chances to keep needs for financial expenses down and encourage people to support the organization...
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