Syed Md. Fakruuddin Nahid Hasan Sayma Sultana Al Mumtahina Shuovy Asma Sultana Nusrat Sharmin Eva Table of content | Page no | Introduction | 6 | 1.0.0 Bangladesh Securities and Exchanges Commission | 7 | 1.2.0 Function of BSEC | 9 | 2.0.0 Capital Market | 10-13 | 3.0.0 Primary Market | 13-23 | 4.0.0 Secondary Market | 23-30 | 5.0.0 Regulation for the Protection of the Market | 31-37 | 6.0.0 Market Senility | 37-39 | 7.0.0 Problems in the Stock
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Technology ARROW@DIT Dissertations School of Computing 2010-09-01 Cloud Computing:Strategies for Cloud Computing Adoption Faith Shimba Dublin Institute of Technology, faith.shimba@gmail.com Recommended Citation Shimba, F.:Cloud Computing:Strategies for Cloud Computing Adoption. Masters Dissertation. Dublin, Dublin Institute of Technology, 2010. This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the School of Computing at ARROW@DIT. It has been accepted for inclusion
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Chapter 1 Business Information Systems in Your Career Multiple Choice Questions 1. One of the recent critical challenges facing Major League Baseball was: a. b. c. d. poor coordination between local and national sales channels. poorly managed sales channels. outdated information systems. decreasing ticket sales. Difficulty: Medium Reference: p. 3 Answer: d 2. The six important business objectives of information technology are new products, services, and business models; customer and supplier intimacy;
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departments involved in the operations or inventory processes are integrated into a single system. An ERP package takes care of the various business processes such as order entry, logistics and warehousing. It also caters to the different business functions such as accounting, marketing, strategic management and the human resource management. Diagrammatic Representation of ERP Process Flow ERP and Retail Sector * Enterprise resource Planning has become a key business driver in today’s world
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for improvement that will keep them in the latest technology to serve the business. Cloud computing and other complementary assets have become the norm in the growth of social networking. Businesses have incorporated Cloud computing models into their technology systems taking on Cloud and transitioning away from customary information technologies. Going to the Cloud and embracing this new technology is being
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| | Selected Answer: | c. gray | | The ____ model is the least restrictive. | Selected Answer: | d. DAC | | | ____ is considered a more “real world” access control than the other models because the access is based on a user’s job function within an organization. | | Selected Answer: | d. Role Based Access Control | | | ____ is often used for managing user access to one or more systems. | | Selected Answer: | c. Rule Based Access Control | | | ____ requires that
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for innovation to take place. But invention is not innovation. In many companies, inventions that result in patents are considered innovations. These companies are often touted as “innovative.” In fact there is no correlation between the number of corporate patents earned and financial success. Until people are willing to buy your product, pay for it, and then buy it again, there is no innovation. A gee-whiz product that does not deliver value to the customer and provide financial benefit to the company
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Question: 1. Aligning the IS Organization within the Enterprise has its set of unresolved issues. Why is this exercise such a contemporary issue? [25] The alignment of business and IT has been a major management concern for decades. Two recent surveys revealed that it continues to be a top priority for CIOs. A contributing issue is the lack of functional relationships between business and IT, complicated by the complexity of the service delivery mechanism. There is also the attitude that a
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management technology, and the people required to run and manage them, constitute an organization's: (Points: 2) Data management environment Networked environment IT infrastructure Information system 4. Key corporate assets are: (Points: 2) Intellectual property, core competencies, and financial and human assets. Production technologies and business processes for sales, marketing, and finance. Knowledge and the firm's tangible assets
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specifying enterprise architecture as a hierarchical, multilevel system comprising aggregation hierarchies, architecture layers and views, (2) discussing enterprise architecture frameworks with regard to essential elements, (3) proposing interfacing requirements of enterprise architecture with other architecture models and (4) matching these findings with current enterprise architecture practice in several large companies. Keywords enterprise architecture, architectural components, architectural layers
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