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msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_793391471#15_1523614159
Title: Manifest Destiny: Impacts on Economics and Politics by Nesikah Wragg Headings: Manifest Destiny: Impacts on Economics and Politics Manifest Destiny: Impacts on Economics and Politics Outline 32 frames Reader view Manifest Destiny: Influences on the North What is Manifest Destiny? Industrialization Intro Industrialization Impacts on Economics and Politics New Market Immigrants Perspective on Manifest Destiny Influence on the West Population Growth Farming and Agriculture Westward Settlement Commerce Gold Rush Reflection Influence on the South Influence on Mexicans Influence on Native American Cotton Gin Gold Rush Texas California Gold Rush Westward Expansion Exploitation of Native Americans 1848-1855 Native Americans Wilmot's Proviso Trading Trading - spread of Diseases Negative Impacts Content: Web. 12 Nov. 2014. <http://www.allempires.com/article/index.php?q=war_mexican>. Influence on the West Population Growth Farming and Agriculture Westward Settlement Farmers began to move west and expand their farms into even larger fields, producing more crops Crop specialization started to take place Large families were considered an asset for farmers As a result, the US experienced an increased birth rate The population also grew as a result of immigration New territories were needed to accommodate the rapid growth As a result of Manifest Destiny, land in the west was being sold for low cost. The government passed the Homestead Act (160 acres of land, work for 5 years before ownership) In some cases land was free Commerce Gold Rush The gold rushes brought many more people to the west They were hoping to get rich by panning for gold They also brought many immigrants to the west in search of profit from gold The US started building ports and increasing trade with countries in the Pacific Farmers also began selling to far-away markets Relied upon cash and credit They also began to deal with regional merchants Reflection Manifest Destiny sped up the split between the North and the South and the issue of slavery Manifest Destiny strengthened the economy in U.S. Influence on the South New Land Acquisition Division of the North and South More Powerful Economy Influence on Mexicans Influence on Native American Cotton Gin Gold Rush Texas Gold was discovered in California in 1848 Many Americans left their jobs to try to strike rich Businesses prospered off new settlers out west Encouraged settlers to continue expanding Led to the rapid growth of California Made cotton the leading crop of the South Slavery's demand went up The South was now tied to cotton and slavery Manifest Destiny and profits fueled westward expansion Mexico allowed Americans to settle in Texas if they followed its rules and traditions The American settlers wanted to follow their own ideals instead Tensions and American's belief in Manifest Destiny led to the Mexican-American War Americans took Texas and also fueled westward expansion Americans traded and Exchanged goods with the Natives Many consequences of westward expansion on Native Americans; disease, desire for land Many Native Americans began to adapt to American culture Loss of land gold rush generals in command effects of war California Gold Rush Westward Expansion Exploitation of Native Americans 1848-1855 Before European settlers arrived, an estimated 300,000 native people lived in small villages throughout the area. In the nineteenth century, many workers migrated to California after James Marshall struck gold at Sutter's Mill in Coloma. Westward expansion had serious consequences for Native Americans since continental expansion implicitly meant the occupation and annexation of their lands. Native Americans Wilmot's Proviso Overpriced items at an isolated mining camp. By 1870 - Native people on reservation without access to their home land.
https://prezi.com/bnoqjk9dycd2/manifest-destiny-impacts-on-economics-and-politics/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_794803281#0_1528385895
Title: Products and Natural Resources of the West Region by Staci Regier Headings: Products and Natural Resources of the West Region Products and Natural Resources of the West Region Outline 9 frames Reader view Products and Natural Resources of the West Objective: summarize the variety of resources in the West Region of the U.S. Resources & Industries Agriculture Summary Alaska Willamette Valley Content: Products and Natural Resources of the West Region by Staci Regier Products and Natural Resources of the West Region SR Published with reusable license by Staci Regier March 29, 2013 4 400 views Outline 9 frames 1 Save to library View 4 Save to library View 2 Save to library View 5 Save to library View 3 Save to library View 6 Save to library View Reader view Products and Natural Resources of the West Objective: summarize the variety of resources in the West Region of the U.S. Resources & Industries Agriculture Agriculture is the main source of income for some areas in the West. Livestock: animals that are raised on farms and ranches. Beef cattle, sheep (wool), and milk are produced in the West. The West is known for its wealthy supply of mineral resources such as oil, coal, lead, silver, gold, and copper. Many of these minerals are found in the Rocky Mountains. The West is the center of the timber industry. Much of the wood products used in the U.S. come from the West (lumber, cardboard, paper, books). Since wood is a valuable resource, timber companies will reforest trees.
https://prezi.com/evopqdjqerre/products-and-natural-resources-of-the-west-region/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_794803281#1_1528387640
Title: Products and Natural Resources of the West Region by Staci Regier Headings: Products and Natural Resources of the West Region Products and Natural Resources of the West Region Outline 9 frames Reader view Products and Natural Resources of the West Objective: summarize the variety of resources in the West Region of the U.S. Resources & Industries Agriculture Summary Alaska Willamette Valley Content: The West is known for its wealthy supply of mineral resources such as oil, coal, lead, silver, gold, and copper. Many of these minerals are found in the Rocky Mountains. The West is the center of the timber industry. Much of the wood products used in the U.S. come from the West (lumber, cardboard, paper, books). Since wood is a valuable resource, timber companies will reforest trees. This means they plant new trees to replace the ones they have cut. Summary The West raises more than 150 different fruit and vegetable crops each year. Raising livestock, fishing, and mining are all important industries in the West Region. Through the use of greenhouses, many states in the West also grow flowers, plants, and bushes that are sold around the U.s. The fishing industry is also important to the West!
https://prezi.com/evopqdjqerre/products-and-natural-resources-of-the-west-region/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_796129721#1_1532768469
Title: Five Faces of Oppression by Kristen Harris Headings: Five Faces of Oppression Five Faces of Oppression Outline 8 frames Reader view Culture of Silence Violence Powerlessness Marginalization Cultural Imperialism Exploitation Five Faces of Oppression Content: Violence Violence is probably the most obvious and visible form of oppression. Members of some groups live with the knowledge that they must fear random, unprovoked attacks on their persons or property. These attacks do not necessarily need a motive but are intended to damage, humiliate, or destroy the person. In American society, women, Blacks, Asians, Arabs, gay men, and lesbians live under such threats of violence. All forms of sexual violence and hate crimes are prevalent examples of violent oppression. Most, if not all, violent oppression is the direct result of xenophobia. Powerlessness Marginalization Marginalization is the act of relegating or confining a group of people to a lower social standing or outer limit or edge of society; overall, it's a process of exclusion. Often, people are marginalized based upon race. One prominent example is the Aboriginal communities of Australia that were excluded from society and pushed farther and farther away from their homelands as cities grew.
https://prezi.com/hi_ohatjv7te/five-faces-of-oppression/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_796129721#2_1532769931
Title: Five Faces of Oppression by Kristen Harris Headings: Five Faces of Oppression Five Faces of Oppression Outline 8 frames Reader view Culture of Silence Violence Powerlessness Marginalization Cultural Imperialism Exploitation Five Faces of Oppression Content: Most, if not all, violent oppression is the direct result of xenophobia. Powerlessness Marginalization Marginalization is the act of relegating or confining a group of people to a lower social standing or outer limit or edge of society; overall, it's a process of exclusion. Often, people are marginalized based upon race. One prominent example is the Aboriginal communities of Australia that were excluded from society and pushed farther and farther away from their homelands as cities grew. In the US, a shamefully large proportion of the population is marginal: elderly people who are fired from their jobs, young Blacks or Latinos who cannot find their first or second jobs, many single mothers and their children, other people involuntarily unemployed, mentally and physically disabled people, and American Native Indians on reservations. The idea of powerlessness links to Marx's theory of socialism: some people "have" power while others "have-not". The powerless are dominated by the ruling class and are situated to take orders and rarely have the right to give them.
https://prezi.com/hi_ohatjv7te/five-faces-of-oppression/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_796129721#3_1532771473
Title: Five Faces of Oppression by Kristen Harris Headings: Five Faces of Oppression Five Faces of Oppression Outline 8 frames Reader view Culture of Silence Violence Powerlessness Marginalization Cultural Imperialism Exploitation Five Faces of Oppression Content: In the US, a shamefully large proportion of the population is marginal: elderly people who are fired from their jobs, young Blacks or Latinos who cannot find their first or second jobs, many single mothers and their children, other people involuntarily unemployed, mentally and physically disabled people, and American Native Indians on reservations. The idea of powerlessness links to Marx's theory of socialism: some people "have" power while others "have-not". The powerless are dominated by the ruling class and are situated to take orders and rarely have the right to give them. Some fundamental injustices associated with powerlessness are inhibition to develop one's capacities, lack of decision making power, and exposure to disrespectful treatment because of the lowered status. The powerless in the US do not participate in basic democratic processes because they feel that they can't or that their participation won't mean anything. In most cases it means not voting or participating in any decision making process. Cultural Imperialism Exploitation Cultural Imperialism involves taking the culture of the ruling class and establishing it as the norm. The groups that have power in society control how the people in that society interpret and communicate.
https://prezi.com/hi_ohatjv7te/five-faces-of-oppression/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797713058#3_1538167286
Title: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold by Jack Henteleff Headings: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold Outline 16 frames Reader view Korea (Continued) Korea Berlin Thanks for listening! Introduction (Continued) Introduction (Continued) Cuba Works Cited How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold War? Conclusion Introduction Cuba (Continued) Content: • Dallek, Robert, et al. American History. Evanston: McDougal Littell, 2008. Print. ( This is the textbook) Korea (Continued) The Berlin Airlift, the Korean War, and the Cuban Missile Crisis were all extremely successful strategies that stopped the spread of communism. The United States did a very good job of keeping communism out. If they hadn't stepped in and helped the needy nations, it is very likely that Germany, Korea, and Cuba would all be communist nations. What would have transpired without the United States, we will never know. Korea Berlin Thanks for listening!
https://prezi.com/kroulgnktyz9/how-did-the-united-states-contain-communism-during-the-cold/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797713058#4_1538168582
Title: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold by Jack Henteleff Headings: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold Outline 16 frames Reader view Korea (Continued) Korea Berlin Thanks for listening! Introduction (Continued) Introduction (Continued) Cuba Works Cited How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold War? Conclusion Introduction Cuba (Continued) Content: This is the textbook) Korea (Continued) The Berlin Airlift, the Korean War, and the Cuban Missile Crisis were all extremely successful strategies that stopped the spread of communism. The United States did a very good job of keeping communism out. If they hadn't stepped in and helped the needy nations, it is very likely that Germany, Korea, and Cuba would all be communist nations. What would have transpired without the United States, we will never know. Korea Berlin Thanks for listening! Introduction (Continued) The United States nearly wiped out North Korea. China enters war in 1950; fighting continues for 3 more years. U.S. was very determined to stop communism. Introduction (Continued) After the war, Korea divided by 38th parallel North Korea wants to reunify Korea "Communist North Korea (Supported by the Soviet Union) invades U.S. supported South Korea...President Harry Truman... vows to defend democratic South Korea" (Korea) When North Korea invaded South Korea, the United States pledged to help because they didn't want North Korea to spread communism.
https://prezi.com/kroulgnktyz9/how-did-the-united-states-contain-communism-during-the-cold/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797713058#5_1538170375
Title: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold by Jack Henteleff Headings: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold Outline 16 frames Reader view Korea (Continued) Korea Berlin Thanks for listening! Introduction (Continued) Introduction (Continued) Cuba Works Cited How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold War? Conclusion Introduction Cuba (Continued) Content: Introduction (Continued) The United States nearly wiped out North Korea. China enters war in 1950; fighting continues for 3 more years. U.S. was very determined to stop communism. Introduction (Continued) After the war, Korea divided by 38th parallel North Korea wants to reunify Korea "Communist North Korea (Supported by the Soviet Union) invades U.S. supported South Korea...President Harry Truman... vows to defend democratic South Korea" (Korea) When North Korea invaded South Korea, the United States pledged to help because they didn't want North Korea to spread communism. When the U.S. said they would defend South Korea, they had to have a plan of attack. So, "General Douglas MacArthur staged a risky, yet successful counterattack at the port of Inchon. North Korean forces were routed and pushed back all the way to the Yalu River,the border with China" (Korea) Cuba Fidel Castro came to power in January 1959. Two years later, the United States invaded to try to take him out of power (Cuba). He made Cuba communist, and the U.S. didn't like it.
https://prezi.com/kroulgnktyz9/how-did-the-united-states-contain-communism-during-the-cold/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797713058#8_1538175593
Title: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold by Jack Henteleff Headings: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold Outline 16 frames Reader view Korea (Continued) Korea Berlin Thanks for listening! Introduction (Continued) Introduction (Continued) Cuba Works Cited How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold War? Conclusion Introduction Cuba (Continued) Content: In April 1963, the United States and the Soviet Union reach an agreement: Soviets withdraw their missiles from Cuba, and the United States takes missiles out of Turkey (Cuba). No more missiles in Cuba, so they can not force other countries to become communist. Works Cited During the Cold War, the Soviet Union wanted to take over other countries and make them have the governmental system of Communism. The United States didn't like that, because they thought their governmental system of Democracy was better. As a result, the U.S. adopted a policy of "Containment", which is "Stopping the spread of Communism through military and nonmilitary ways" (Littell). How did the U.S. Contain Communism? Berlin Korea Cuba Imagine if you lived in a place where you had no freedom, and were ruled by an evil man like Joseph Stalin. That is what it would be like in many countries if it weren't for the United States' policy of containment. Germany/Berlin divided into 4 zones Berlin in Soviet zone of Germany France, U.S., and Britain join zones in Berlin-making West Berlin Communists wanted to take West Berlin over because they had "Expansive tendencies" (X) U.S. didn't want to lose their zone, so they resisted Soviets blockade Berlin (Berlin Map).
https://prezi.com/kroulgnktyz9/how-did-the-united-states-contain-communism-during-the-cold/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797713058#9_1538177563
Title: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold by Jack Henteleff Headings: How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold Outline 16 frames Reader view Korea (Continued) Korea Berlin Thanks for listening! Introduction (Continued) Introduction (Continued) Cuba Works Cited How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold War? Conclusion Introduction Cuba (Continued) Content: As a result, the U.S. adopted a policy of "Containment", which is "Stopping the spread of Communism through military and nonmilitary ways" (Littell). How did the U.S. Contain Communism? Berlin Korea Cuba Imagine if you lived in a place where you had no freedom, and were ruled by an evil man like Joseph Stalin. That is what it would be like in many countries if it weren't for the United States' policy of containment. Germany/Berlin divided into 4 zones Berlin in Soviet zone of Germany France, U.S., and Britain join zones in Berlin-making West Berlin Communists wanted to take West Berlin over because they had "Expansive tendencies" (X) U.S. didn't want to lose their zone, so they resisted Soviets blockade Berlin (Berlin Map). They wanted to weaken it to make it easier to take over. U.S., Britain, and France respond with an airlift (Berlin Map). The U.S., Britain, and France are flying supplies to the people in West Berlin so they can defend it and resist a takeover. How Did the United States Contain Communism During the Cold War? Conclusion Introduction Cuba (Continued) Show full text Prezi The Science Conversational Presenting For Business For Education Testimonials Presentation Gallery Video Gallery Design Gallery Templates Products Prezi Present Prezi Video Prezi Design Company About Team Careers Our Values Press Our Customers Company Information Contact Us Support Learn Prezi Support Prezi Classic Support Hire an Expert Languages English Español 한국어 日本語 Deutsch Português Français Magyar Italiano © 2021 Prezi Inc. Terms & Privacy Policy
https://prezi.com/kroulgnktyz9/how-did-the-united-states-contain-communism-during-the-cold/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797837691#0_1538567535
Title: Should fast food be blamed for obesity? by Elizabeth Bugbey Headings: Should fast food be blamed for obesity? Should fast food be blamed for obesity? Outline 43 frames Reader view Claim: People's choices about exercise and their eating habits should be blamed for obesity, not fast food. Elizabeth Bugbey Period 5 January 8, 2013 should fast food be blamed for obesity? Ethical Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity -Even though there are fast food restaurants where we live (McDonald's and Chick-fil-A), no one in this room is obese. Why? Because... -We exercise self control. -We demonstrate an ability to balance the number of calories we consume and burn. -We walk to class instead of using scooters, and try to avoid eating in excess. -We do this because we recognize the value of good health and the negative aspects of obesity. Our attitudes and habits are to blame... not the food! Logical Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity Works Cited Rebuttal: Obese people make the choice to eat fast food, they are not forced to. Emotional Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity Concession: fast food meals have extremely high amounts of calories, often equivalent to a 2,000 calories/day diet. Counterargument: Fast food should be blamed for obesity. Content: Should fast food be blamed for obesity? by Elizabeth Bugbey Should fast food be blamed for obesity? EB Published with reusable license by Elizabeth Bugbey January 9, 2013 2 views Outline 43 frames 1 Save to library View 4 Save to library View 2 Save to library View 5 Save to library View 3 Save to library View 6 Save to library View Reader view Claim: People's choices about exercise and their eating habits should be blamed for obesity, not fast food. (fattylanes) Elizabeth Bugbey Period 5 January 8, 2013 (Elizabeth M. Whelan) ("wallefatties") ("Overweight-People-Are-Perceived-as-Lazy-2") ("fast-food-tattoos") should fast food be blamed for obesity? Ethical Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity -This article from the NYTimes suggests that obesity should not be blamed on the number fast food restaurants around people, nor on the availability of healthier food options. -The choice made by overweight people to eat more food than necessary and food that's not good for them is to blame for their obesity. -In this Forbes article, the AAP (American Academy of Pediatrics) agrees that fast food is not to blame for obesity. -The blame goes on the people for taking in more calories than they burn - it doesn't matter if it's fast food or not. -The lack of self control among overweight people causes them to be that way.
https://prezi.com/l15fhy9jj3d2/should-fast-food-be-blamed-for-obesity/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797837691#5_1538580316
Title: Should fast food be blamed for obesity? by Elizabeth Bugbey Headings: Should fast food be blamed for obesity? Should fast food be blamed for obesity? Outline 43 frames Reader view Claim: People's choices about exercise and their eating habits should be blamed for obesity, not fast food. Elizabeth Bugbey Period 5 January 8, 2013 should fast food be blamed for obesity? Ethical Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity -Even though there are fast food restaurants where we live (McDonald's and Chick-fil-A), no one in this room is obese. Why? Because... -We exercise self control. -We demonstrate an ability to balance the number of calories we consume and burn. -We walk to class instead of using scooters, and try to avoid eating in excess. -We do this because we recognize the value of good health and the negative aspects of obesity. Our attitudes and habits are to blame... not the food! Logical Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity Works Cited Rebuttal: Obese people make the choice to eat fast food, they are not forced to. Emotional Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity Concession: fast food meals have extremely high amounts of calories, often equivalent to a 2,000 calories/day diet. Counterargument: Fast food should be blamed for obesity. Content: -People who live closer to fast food restaurants are not found to be any more/less obese than those who live greater distances away. -In addition to laziness, people's tendency to overeat - fast food OR food at home - is to blame for obesity. Works Cited Rebuttal: Obese people make the choice to eat fast food, they are not forced to. Emotional Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity ("Blaming Fast Food") -No one is forced to eat fast food. In any quantity. -The overweight people who choose to eat the food are to blame for their condition. (Elie Ayrouth) ("vegetarian-women") ("polls Obese People 1211_757807_poll_xlarge") ("091312lunchmcdonalds_512x288") Concession: fast food meals have extremely high amounts of calories, often equivalent to a 2,000 calories/day diet. Counterargument:
https://prezi.com/l15fhy9jj3d2/should-fast-food-be-blamed-for-obesity/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_797837691#6_1538582692
Title: Should fast food be blamed for obesity? by Elizabeth Bugbey Headings: Should fast food be blamed for obesity? Should fast food be blamed for obesity? Outline 43 frames Reader view Claim: People's choices about exercise and their eating habits should be blamed for obesity, not fast food. Elizabeth Bugbey Period 5 January 8, 2013 should fast food be blamed for obesity? Ethical Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity -Even though there are fast food restaurants where we live (McDonald's and Chick-fil-A), no one in this room is obese. Why? Because... -We exercise self control. -We demonstrate an ability to balance the number of calories we consume and burn. -We walk to class instead of using scooters, and try to avoid eating in excess. -We do this because we recognize the value of good health and the negative aspects of obesity. Our attitudes and habits are to blame... not the food! Logical Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity Works Cited Rebuttal: Obese people make the choice to eat fast food, they are not forced to. Emotional Appeals About How Fast Food Shouldn't Be Blamed for Obesity Concession: fast food meals have extremely high amounts of calories, often equivalent to a 2,000 calories/day diet. Counterargument: Fast food should be blamed for obesity. Content: In any quantity. -The overweight people who choose to eat the food are to blame for their condition. (Elie Ayrouth) ("vegetarian-women") ("polls Obese People 1211_757807_poll_xlarge") ("091312lunchmcdonalds_512x288") Concession: fast food meals have extremely high amounts of calories, often equivalent to a 2,000 calories/day diet. Counterargument: Fast food should be blamed for obesity. ("db2609-im-luggin-it") ("sharma-obesity-headless-person1") Show full text
https://prezi.com/l15fhy9jj3d2/should-fast-food-be-blamed-for-obesity/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_798002946#16_1539090691
Title: Chapter 7: Balancing Nationalism and Sectionalism by Jimmy McGee Headings: Chapter 7: Balancing Nationalism and Sectionalism Chapter 7: Balancing Nationalism and Sectionalism Outline 36 frames Reader view Chapter 7 Continued What was the Trail of Tears? Continued What led to the formation of the Democratic-Republican Party? Jackson’s New Presidential Style What was the Missouri Compromise? What is nationalism? Continued Section 3 Continued The Supreme Court Boosts National Power The Age of Jackson Section 2 Nationalism at Center Stage Section 1 Regional Economies Create Differences Two Economic Systems Develop The American System Continued Continued Continued What was the Panic of 1837? Section 4 State’s Rights and the National Bank How did Jackson destroy the National Bank? Continued Continued What is the principle of nullification? Balancing Nationalism & Sectionalism 1815-1840 Content: However, people from all regions supported strengthening the national bank. A national bank would provide a national currency. In 1816, Congress voted to set up the Second Bank of the United States. In 1815, President Madison presented a unification plan to Congress. It called for establishing tariffs. It also called for strengthening the national bank. In addition, the plan promoted the development of national transportation systems. Many members of Congress, including the Speaker of the House, Henry Clay, supported the plan. Clay called the plan the American System. ( Clay’s plan for economic development) Continued The changes in manufacturing brought about an Industrial Revolution.
https://prezi.com/ldvrn42mhmvf/chapter-7-balancing-nationalism-and-sectionalism/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_798525452#1_1540811814
Title: Nature/Nurture & Cultural Differences by Kelly Hughes Headings: Nature/Nurture & Cultural Differences Nature/Nurture & Cultural Differences Outline 11 frames Reader view Nature How twin & adoption studies explain the influences of environment & heredity The interaction between genes & environment Do genes determine our behavior? Evolutionary, Parental, & Peer Influence "In some domains it looks as though are identical twins reared apart are… Just as similar as identical twins reared together. Now that's an amazing find and I can't assure you none of us would have expected that degree of similarity." Thomas Bouchard, 1981 The relationship between temperament & personality "If you want to blame your parents... you are entitled to blame the genes they gave you, but not, by any facts I know... the way they treated you." M. Seligman, 1994 "We share half our genes with the banana." Evolutionary biologist Robert May, 2001 "Men resemble the times more than they resemble their fathers." Arab proverb "Men's natures are alike; it is their habits that carried them far apart." Confucius, 500 B.C.E. "Heredity deals the cards; environment plays the hand." Charles L Brewer, 1990 "Evolution opens fields for far more important researches. Psychology will be based on new foundations" Charles Darwin, 1859 How nature & nurture contribute to gender differences "When [someone] has discovered why men in Bond Street wear black hats he will at the same moment have discovered why men in Tibuctoo wear red feathers." G.K. Chesterton, 1903 Nurture Evolutionary, Parental, & Peer Influence, cont. "We carry to our graves the essence of the zygote that was first us." Mary Pipher, 2009 "Genes & experiences are just two ways of doing the same thing- wiring synapses." J. LeDeoux, 2001 How cultural norms affect behavior & "Genes, by themselves, are like seeds dropped on pavement: powerless to produce anything." F. Waal, 1999 Cultural Differences Content: it's an interplay among biological dispositions, developmental experiences, & current cultural situations Nature: differing sex chromosomes & levels of sex hormones Nurture: Gender roles & gender identity Social learning theory: we learn by observation, imitation, reward, & punishment Cognition: schemas help organize a child's world The relationship between temperament & personality Forget nature versus nurture; think nature via nurture "If you want to blame your parents... you are entitled to blame the genes they gave you, but not, by any facts I know... the way they treated you." M. Seligman, 1994 Natural selection: behaviors that increase one's likelihood of survival are most enduring Second Darwinian revolution: the application of evolutionary principles to psychology "We share half our genes with the banana." Evolutionary biologist Robert May, 2001 "Men resemble the times more than they resemble their fathers."
https://prezi.com/mcoscygmbcj3/naturenurture-cultural-differences/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_800473919#1_1547865234
Title: Vogue Magazine Analysis by Jasmine Steward Headings: Vogue Magazine Analysis Vogue Magazine Analysis Outline 12 frames Reader view Content: However a majority of the total of the readers is 20-24. the color scheme on this specific cover is very pastel pink, which would appeal to the target audience. It's very girly and sweet. Content this advert is packed full of the product they're trying to promote. It's a very simple and easy to look at advert, the color scheme in this advert is obviously gold. Gold is known as very classy and glamorous, which bigs up the products being advertised because the consumer then associates gold with the product. the whole page is dedicated to the pictures to emphasize what is being sold, it also adds effect. Publisher Conde Nast bought vogue and established Conde Nast publications in 1909. Anna Wintour, 1988-present, is the current editor in leadership. The Head Quarters building is based in New York.
https://prezi.com/q3idjwkngiof/vogue-magazine-analysis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_800473919#2_1547866384
Title: Vogue Magazine Analysis by Jasmine Steward Headings: Vogue Magazine Analysis Vogue Magazine Analysis Outline 12 frames Reader view Content: Gold is known as very classy and glamorous, which bigs up the products being advertised because the consumer then associates gold with the product. the whole page is dedicated to the pictures to emphasize what is being sold, it also adds effect. Publisher Conde Nast bought vogue and established Conde Nast publications in 1909. Anna Wintour, 1988-present, is the current editor in leadership. The Head Quarters building is based in New York. A lot of the photography in Vogue is either highly professional and done in a studio, or extremely casual to give it more of a hand drawn/ scrappy feel to it. Vogue always uses celebrities to show that big and successful people in the fashion world are behind the successful fashion magazine Vogue. Show full text
https://prezi.com/q3idjwkngiof/vogue-magazine-analysis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_800922110#8_1549394984
Title: Romeo and Juliet Deaths: Who is Responsible?? by Amber Smith Headings: Romeo and Juliet Deaths: Who is Responsible?? Romeo and Juliet Deaths: Who is Responsible?? Outline 38 frames Reader view The person responsible for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet are unknown. Evidence has shown that Juliet is responsible for the deaths of Romeo and herself. This presentation will explain why Juliet is accused guilty according to evidence. There is someone responsible and Juliet has the most evidence. Content: Juliet's doubts were warning her and she chose not to listen. The evidence shows that Juliet is so in love with Romeo that she forgets about her doubts that are foreshadowing the dangers to come of their love. Juliet, who is trying to convince the Friar to get her out of her marraige with Paris, says, "And I will do it without fear or doubt, to live an unstained wife to my sweet love (821:87).", Juliet directly tells the Friar that she will kill herself to remain faithful to Romeo. She is expressing how strong her love for Romeo is in an unfearful, but reckless manner. The refrence foreshadows Juliet's death because in the end she killed herself for Romeo. Juliet's desperation to die rather than marry Paris shows that she is willing to do anything to stay with Romeo. The ironic situation of Juliet's marraige to Romeo, her enemy and cousin's murderer, and the idea of Juliet marrying Paris to get over Tybalt's death had caused Juliet to look toward the Friar for help. Juliet threatend the Friar with her life to force him to help her escape her marraige with Paris. The Friar had no choice, but to create a scheme in which Juliet would fake her death to get her out of the marraige.
https://prezi.com/qzuagg2jgnda/romeo-and-juliet-deaths-who-is-responsible/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_801081851#4_1549776970
Title: The Andrew Carnegie Effect by Cole Smith Headings: The Andrew Carnegie Effect The Andrew Carnegie Effect Outline 13 frames Reader view Emigrating to America Carnegie's First Investment The Andrew Carnegie Effect The Story of a boy from Scottland The Steel Years In America At the age of 13, Andrew got a job in a textile mill bringing bobbins to the workers at the looms. He was paid $1.20 per week. After a year, Andrew became a messenger for a local telegraph company. He eventually taught himself how to use the telegraph equipment to send and receive messages and was hired by the superintendent of the Pittsburgh division of the Pennsylvania Railroad as a private secretary and personal telegrapher. Content: The beliefs that made him leave the business world to become a philanthropist are outlined in a famous essay he wrote in 1889 called "The Gospel of Wealth." In his life time he donated $350 mil. dollars or 905 of his fortune for the benefit of man kind. Epilogue In 1886 he married Louise Whitfield, the daughter of a prosperous New York merchant. Their only child, Margaret, was born in 1897. Andrew Carnegie died on August 11, 1919, in Shadowbrook, Massachusetts at the age of 83, as a result of bronchial pneumonia. All in all Andrew Carnegie was a great man even if he wasn't the most memorable. Show full text
https://prezi.com/rfsfoegeghwc/the-andrew-carnegie-effect/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802492002#5_1555190026
Title: Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy by marissa schneider Headings: Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy Outline 13 frames Reader view Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy What is it? What is it? Education How Does It Work? Police Where Is It? How is the Pope Elected? Health Care What is Conclave? The Economy The Swiss Guard So the Pope Has Political Power? Content: but not always (cough Pope Francis cough) Vatican City is amoung the best in the world as far as health care goes, providing all medical needs completely free of charge to the citizens. What is Conclave? The Economy The economy is based on religious work: the vatican recieves contributions from churches all around the world. Tourists come to visit religious shrines and view art that's centuries old. The major indusrty is governance of the church. Conclave has been the way of electing the pope for more than half of the time the church has existed, and its the oldest ongoing way of choosing the leader of an government. Bishops come from around the world to vote in an election, guided by the Holy Spirit, in which one of the bishops amoung them is elected "the Bishop of Rome"; the Pope. The Swiss Guard So the Pope Has Political Power?
https://prezi.com/txtwbjkwtofe/vatican-city-a-modern-theocracy/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802492002#6_1555191473
Title: Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy by marissa schneider Headings: Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy Outline 13 frames Reader view Vatican City: a Modern Theocracy What is it? What is it? Education How Does It Work? Police Where Is It? How is the Pope Elected? Health Care What is Conclave? The Economy The Swiss Guard So the Pope Has Political Power? Content: The major indusrty is governance of the church. Conclave has been the way of electing the pope for more than half of the time the church has existed, and its the oldest ongoing way of choosing the leader of an government. Bishops come from around the world to vote in an election, guided by the Holy Spirit, in which one of the bishops amoung them is elected "the Bishop of Rome"; the Pope. The Swiss Guard So the Pope Has Political Power? The Swiss Guard is a small force of men that are responsible for the safety of the Pope, including the security of the Apostolic Palace. The Swiss Guard serves as the military of Vatican City. Yes! Vatican City is recongnized as a sovereign territory which means within the walls of the territory, the Pope has the exclusive right to exercise power. Also, outside of the walls, Vatican City has diplomatic relations spanning across 179 nations.
https://prezi.com/txtwbjkwtofe/vatican-city-a-modern-theocracy/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802578152#0_1555645449
Title: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Headings: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Outline 15 frames Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: How can this be applied in the real world? Things to remember! Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Hypothesis How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Content: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? RI Published with reusable license by Reona Ido August 19, 2014 4,563 views Outline 15 frames 1 Save to library View 4 Save to library View 2 Save to library View 5 Save to library View 3 Save to library View 6 Save to library View Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: Results were Temperature Carbon Dioxide Concentration Set up the two plants in water solution (each plant has a light source with different voltage: 1Watts per gallon and 3Watts per gallon, make sure you use the variable power supply) Set the timer to 1 min. Count the bubbles that forms in 1 min Record results 2 Elodea plants 2 5 gallon water container 2 lamps 2 big beakers Timer/stopwatch 2 variable power supply Using bigger gallons so that the temperature wont increase/decrease easily (temperature affects the rate of photosynthesis) Repeat experiment more than once Human errors, e.g. recording of the time. increase the values of light intensity tested on the plant Measurement is not too accurate. How can this be applied in the real world? Eutrophication (a process where water bodies receive excess nutrients that stimulate a bloom of algae) Plants produce oxygen at a limited pace Controls phytoplankton and moss.
https://prezi.com/u4nm1fwvxwjl/does-light-intensity-increase-the-rate-of-photosynthesis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802578152#1_1555647756
Title: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Headings: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Outline 15 frames Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: How can this be applied in the real world? Things to remember! Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Hypothesis How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Content: 1Watts per gallon and 3Watts per gallon, make sure you use the variable power supply) Set the timer to 1 min. Count the bubbles that forms in 1 min Record results 2 Elodea plants 2 5 gallon water container 2 lamps 2 big beakers Timer/stopwatch 2 variable power supply Using bigger gallons so that the temperature wont increase/decrease easily (temperature affects the rate of photosynthesis) Repeat experiment more than once Human errors, e.g. recording of the time. increase the values of light intensity tested on the plant Measurement is not too accurate. How can this be applied in the real world? Eutrophication (a process where water bodies receive excess nutrients that stimulate a bloom of algae) Plants produce oxygen at a limited pace Controls phytoplankton and moss. There is always a way out" -Confucius Reona and Michael have been growing aquatic plants for a while, specifically Elodeas which is a type of pond weed. Michael states that a higher light intensity would increase the rate of photosynthesis, however, Reona disagrees. They both decide to test this theory out by conducting an experiment. Things to remember! When there is no light, photosynthesis can't occur since light is the activation energy needed for plants to convert carbon dioxide and water to glucose and oxygen When there is no light, the plants would use up oxygen therefore emitting carbon dioxide bubbles instead.
https://prezi.com/u4nm1fwvxwjl/does-light-intensity-increase-the-rate-of-photosynthesis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802578152#2_1555650078
Title: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Headings: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Outline 15 frames Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: How can this be applied in the real world? Things to remember! Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Hypothesis How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Content: There is always a way out" -Confucius Reona and Michael have been growing aquatic plants for a while, specifically Elodeas which is a type of pond weed. Michael states that a higher light intensity would increase the rate of photosynthesis, however, Reona disagrees. They both decide to test this theory out by conducting an experiment. Things to remember! When there is no light, photosynthesis can't occur since light is the activation energy needed for plants to convert carbon dioxide and water to glucose and oxygen When there is no light, the plants would use up oxygen therefore emitting carbon dioxide bubbles instead. The plants should be given a couple minutes to start initiating the process of photosynthesis before you start timing. Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Source: Factors limiting Photosynthesis. ( n.d.).
https://prezi.com/u4nm1fwvxwjl/does-light-intensity-increase-the-rate-of-photosynthesis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802578152#3_1555651863
Title: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Headings: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Outline 15 frames Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: How can this be applied in the real world? Things to remember! Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Hypothesis How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Content: The plants should be given a couple minutes to start initiating the process of photosynthesis before you start timing. Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Source: Factors limiting Photosynthesis. ( n.d.). BBC News. Retrieved August 14, 2014, from http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/science/add_aqa_pre_2011/plants/plants2.shtml Hypothesis If the intensity of light is greater, then the rate of photosynthesis increases. How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Factors affecting the rate of photosynthesis. ( n.d.). -
https://prezi.com/u4nm1fwvxwjl/does-light-intensity-increase-the-rate-of-photosynthesis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802578152#4_1555653372
Title: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Headings: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Outline 15 frames Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: How can this be applied in the real world? Things to remember! Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Hypothesis How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Content: BBC News. Retrieved August 14, 2014, from http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/science/add_aqa_pre_2011/plants/plants2.shtml Hypothesis If the intensity of light is greater, then the rate of photosynthesis increases. How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Factors affecting the rate of photosynthesis. ( n.d.). - Pass My Exams: Easy exam revision notes for GSCE Biology. Retrieved August 12, 2014, from http://www.passmyexams.co.uk/GCSE/biology/factors-affecting-rate-of-photosynthesis.html Photosynthesis. ( n.d.). What is Photosynthesis?.
https://prezi.com/u4nm1fwvxwjl/does-light-intensity-increase-the-rate-of-photosynthesis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802578152#5_1555654856
Title: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Headings: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Outline 15 frames Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: How can this be applied in the real world? Things to remember! Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Hypothesis How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Content: Pass My Exams: Easy exam revision notes for GSCE Biology. Retrieved August 12, 2014, from http://www.passmyexams.co.uk/GCSE/biology/factors-affecting-rate-of-photosynthesis.html Photosynthesis. ( n.d.). What is Photosynthesis?. Retrieved August 14, 2014, from http://faculty.clintoncc.suny.edu/faculty/michael.gregory/files/bio%20101/bio%20101%20lectures/photosynthesis/photosyn.htm Therefore Michael was wrong. The rate of photosynthesis is also affected by limiting factors. Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Independent Variable: Intensity of Light to Elodea (1Watts and 3Watts per gallon) Dependent Variable:
https://prezi.com/u4nm1fwvxwjl/does-light-intensity-increase-the-rate-of-photosynthesis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_802578152#6_1555656477
Title: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? by Reona Ido Headings: Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Does Light Intensity increase the Rate of Photosynthesis? Outline 15 frames Reader view Experiment Complete! Sources Improvements to make The Scenario: How can this be applied in the real world? Things to remember! Graph How does light intensity affect the Rate of Photosynthesis? Limiting Factors Hypothesis How to conduct the experiment Things Needed for the Experiment to work: Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Content: Retrieved August 14, 2014, from http://faculty.clintoncc.suny.edu/faculty/michael.gregory/files/bio%20101/bio%20101%20lectures/photosynthesis/photosyn.htm Therefore Michael was wrong. The rate of photosynthesis is also affected by limiting factors. Michael Kwon, Reona Ido Biology 11 Mr. Lawrence Equation for Photosynthesis: 6 CO2 (g) + H2O (l) -> C6H12O6 (aq) + 6O2 (g) Variables Independent Variable: Intensity of Light to Elodea (1Watts and 3Watts per gallon) Dependent Variable: Rate of Photosynthesis (amount of oxygen produced or carbon dioxide used up) Controlled Variables: Same type of pond weed (Elodea), Same type of water (pH: amount of salts/solutes in solvent/water) , similar size of leaves (Why not roots?), and amount of solution/water. Show full text Prezi The Science Conversational Presenting For Business For Education Testimonials Presentation Gallery Video Gallery Design Gallery Templates Products Prezi Present Prezi Video Prezi Design Company About Team Careers Our Values Press Our Customers Company Information Contact Us Support Learn Prezi Support Prezi Classic Support Hire an Expert Languages English Español 한국어 日本語 Deutsch Português Français Magyar Italiano © 2021 Prezi Inc. Terms & Privacy Policy
https://prezi.com/u4nm1fwvxwjl/does-light-intensity-increase-the-rate-of-photosynthesis/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_804005678#4_1559976401
Title: Clothing in the Igbo culture. by sharae ratliff Headings: Clothing in the Igbo culture. Clothing in the Igbo culture. Outline 45 frames Reader view Clothing in the Ibo culture. Ibo Wedding Attire Ankle plates At an Ibo wedding the fabric of the clothing generally goes with the them of everything else Post colonial Attire for men. Pre-colonial women's Attire : Formal clothing Women Post colonial attire: Pre-colonial Traditional men Attire "Culture of Nigeria." Countries and Their Cultures. Advmeg, Inc, 01 Jan. 2015. Web. 04 Apr. 2015. <http://www.everyculture.com/Ma-Ni/Nigeria.html>. Example: "Red cap" Meaning of clothing Title based attire. There are certain clothing that is worn by the Ibo people because of their title or social status. Children Attire Cited Sources: CITED SOURCES CONT... "The Igbo Academy." The Igbo Academy. N.p., n.d. Web. 07 Apr. 2015. https://ndebe.wordpress.com/category/igbo-clothing/ Clothing because of Ibos location... Content: The child is hardly wearing clothes. A group of women with their children. For formal occasions they wear a long shirt, often decorated with tucks and embroidery, over a dressy wrap, shoes, and a hat. Women wear wraps for both informal and formal occasions. The everyday wrapper is made from inexpensive cotton, dyed locally. For formal wear, the wrapper is either woven or batikdyed, and often imported. Two Ibo men wearing an Isiagu top, trousers and Okpu Agwu These are all pictures of men and women wearing a formal Attire. During the pre- colonial era the formal clothing was The same as there modern day formal clothing but the clothing was made with less expensive material and was not as loud and colorful as the pictures up above. The Ibos live in Iboland. The stifling heat of central Africa dictated Their choice in clothing.
https://prezi.com/xh5m5afslblx/clothing-in-the-igbo-culture/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_804005678#7_1559982619
Title: Clothing in the Igbo culture. by sharae ratliff Headings: Clothing in the Igbo culture. Clothing in the Igbo culture. Outline 45 frames Reader view Clothing in the Ibo culture. Ibo Wedding Attire Ankle plates At an Ibo wedding the fabric of the clothing generally goes with the them of everything else Post colonial Attire for men. Pre-colonial women's Attire : Formal clothing Women Post colonial attire: Pre-colonial Traditional men Attire "Culture of Nigeria." Countries and Their Cultures. Advmeg, Inc, 01 Jan. 2015. Web. 04 Apr. 2015. <http://www.everyculture.com/Ma-Ni/Nigeria.html>. Example: "Red cap" Meaning of clothing Title based attire. There are certain clothing that is worn by the Ibo people because of their title or social status. Children Attire Cited Sources: CITED SOURCES CONT... "The Igbo Academy." The Igbo Academy. N.p., n.d. Web. 07 Apr. 2015. https://ndebe.wordpress.com/category/igbo-clothing/ Clothing because of Ibos location... Content: They also wore, a torque, short wrapper and a head scarf. This outfit was considered stylish at the time. At an Ibo wedding the fabric of the clothing generally goes with the them of everything else Post colonial Attire for men. Pre-colonial women's Attire : Generally at a wedding the Bride would wear a wrapper over her head, a blouse and jewelery known as the Jigida (waist beads), Ihe Olu (coral beads) and lots of other jewelry. The Groom would wear a pull over shirt this is called an Isigu and plan colored trouser. Sometimes the Groom may wear a hat. The father of the Groom wears a hat to match the groom to show his relations. Formal clothing For the ceremony the Bride is covered in Nzu (A white clay). The waste and upper body area are covered with cloth known as Akwete and its usually an African print Women usually carried babies on their backs with a strip of clothing binding the two with a knot at her chest Women Post colonial attire:
https://prezi.com/xh5m5afslblx/clothing-in-the-igbo-culture/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_804005678#8_1559984764
Title: Clothing in the Igbo culture. by sharae ratliff Headings: Clothing in the Igbo culture. Clothing in the Igbo culture. Outline 45 frames Reader view Clothing in the Ibo culture. Ibo Wedding Attire Ankle plates At an Ibo wedding the fabric of the clothing generally goes with the them of everything else Post colonial Attire for men. Pre-colonial women's Attire : Formal clothing Women Post colonial attire: Pre-colonial Traditional men Attire "Culture of Nigeria." Countries and Their Cultures. Advmeg, Inc, 01 Jan. 2015. Web. 04 Apr. 2015. <http://www.everyculture.com/Ma-Ni/Nigeria.html>. Example: "Red cap" Meaning of clothing Title based attire. There are certain clothing that is worn by the Ibo people because of their title or social status. Children Attire Cited Sources: CITED SOURCES CONT... "The Igbo Academy." The Igbo Academy. N.p., n.d. Web. 07 Apr. 2015. https://ndebe.wordpress.com/category/igbo-clothing/ Clothing because of Ibos location... Content: The Groom would wear a pull over shirt this is called an Isigu and plan colored trouser. Sometimes the Groom may wear a hat. The father of the Groom wears a hat to match the groom to show his relations. Formal clothing For the ceremony the Bride is covered in Nzu (A white clay). The waste and upper body area are covered with cloth known as Akwete and its usually an African print Women usually carried babies on their backs with a strip of clothing binding the two with a knot at her chest Women Post colonial attire: Pre-colonial Traditional men Attire The Ibo women Modern (post colonial), Attire is generally made up of a puffed sleeve blouse along with two wrappers and a head tie. Since the colonists influenced a new way of dressing the clothing worn is now brighter and has more personality. Pre-colonial women's formal attire "Culture of Nigeria." Countries and Their Cultures. Advmeg, Inc, 01 Jan. 2015.
https://prezi.com/xh5m5afslblx/clothing-in-the-igbo-culture/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#0_1563904910
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Log in Get started TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. LB Published with reusable license by Lynn Byron December 10, 2012 21 views Outline 4 frames 1 Save to library View 4 Save to library View 2 Save to library View 3 Save to library View Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#1_1563913748
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#2_1563922574
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#3_1563931549
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#6_1563958247
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. SOURCES: •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#7_1563967458
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. SOURCES: •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#8_1563976203
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. http://library.thinkquest.org/04oct/00451/telephone.htm http://haysvillelibrary.wordpress.com/2010/02/25/the-telephone-gambit-2/ In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#9_1563985290
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. http://library.thinkquest.org/04oct/00451/telephone.htm http://haysvillelibrary.wordpress.com/2010/02/25/the-telephone-gambit-2/ In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. Comparison of Gray's Patent Application Compared with Bell's Notebook (Seth Shulman, The Telephone Gambit) •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#10_1563994815
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. Comparison of Gray's Patent Application Compared with Bell's Notebook (Seth Shulman, The Telephone Gambit) •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#11_1564004208
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#12_1564013289
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention.
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#13_1564022196
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. Alexander Graham Bell Speaking into Early Telephone, 1876 •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.”
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_805138873#14_1564031265
Title: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. by Lynn Byron Headings: TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. TELEPHONE: The most important invention of modern time. Outline 4 frames Reader view •The first telephone operators only answered the phone when they felt like it. The operator would pick up the phone and say, “Number please.” If the number wasn't busy, the operator took a chord and plugged it into a switchboard. This connected the caller to the number. The operator system changed because there were too many people with telephones, and it cost too much money to have that many operators working. •These first operators needed to have good memories to know which people went with which plugs. In the 1880’s in Lowell, Massachusetts, there was a measles epidemic. The doctors were worried that if all the operators got the measles, then nobody would be able to control the telephone operating system. A doctor suggested that rather than relying on operator’s memories, each person should be assigned a number. This is how the telephone number came into play. Early telephones were nothing like the ones we have today. The first telephone did not have a bell, so the caller had to tap the phone with a hammer to let the receiver know a call was being sent to them. It was Thomas Watson who invented the bell. •In the 1940’s, after World War II, telephones became very popular but it was too expensive for each home to have its own line, so the party line system was created. Although each home would have its own telephone, the party line system had between two and four homes sharing a single phone line. This meant that you could pick up your telephone and listen to your neighbor’s conversations. The 1800’s was a time for advancement. •The pushbutton telephone was invented in 1941. Then a transmitter was invented by Walter Hauser Britain in 1947 to amplify the sound across the wires. This meant that calls could be sent longer distances. The first active satellite for telephones was launched in 1962. It was called Echo I and it orbited the earth once every 157 hours. This was important because telephone calls could now be made across oceans without relying on under-sea cables which broke frequently and were sometimes snacks for sharks! In 1964, a non-moving satellite was launched into space. Touch tone service became available in 1963. •Many of these advancements have made our lives today easier. Prior to the telephone, telecommunications as we know it today with radio, television and the Internet did not exist. The only form of electrical communication was the telegraph, which was extremely expensive, very limited in deployment and even difficult to use (you had to memorize codes for each letter of the alphabet, and have good manual dexterity to operate one). •When you understand that prior to the invention of the telephone almost all people had very limited means of communication, you can see that life was very different in that era. Information for the most part moved only at the speed of a person carrying it, or that of a wagon, train or mail ship. Communication between the Americas and Europe was occasionally delayed by weeks or even months due to severe winter storms. People who needed emergency services frequently suffered and died due to the slowness of communications without telephones. Important news stories of distant events were often published in newspapers days or even weeks after they occurred. •A phone call works by going through the telephone wire and then to a radio wave. The radio wave sends it to the nearest transmitter, which sends it to the nearest telephone wire of the person receiving the call. To transmit calls, they used to use copper wires. Today, fiber optic cables and laser lights are used. •Alexander Bell historically invented the telephone. However, there was another inventor at the same time with the identical idea; Elisha Gray independently designed a device that could transmit speech electrically as well. Even though they both went to the patent office on the same day, Bell arrived first so he was the one to receive the patent on the telephone. This started a legal battle between the two over the invention of the telephone and the conflict became quite famous. In 1876, at the age of twenty-nine, Alexander Graham Bell designed the telephone; A wire-based electrical system that would eventually become one of the most important inventions in history. •Within just a few years of the telephone’s invention, tens of thousands had been built and placed into service in both North America and Europe because it satisfied the important human social need for communication. The telephone has played a huge role in human society since that time and spurred the creation of many inventions such as the cell phone, the internet, and even satellites. It is still widely used today, is vital to how modern business functions, and allows for an incredible speed of communication. •It has been said that Alexander Graham Bell invented the phone to help his few family members as they suffered from hearing problems. So communication could be held without actually having to walk over to a person and talk to them face to face and to create a way to rapidly communicate over long distances. The history of the telephone is an amazing one. Several people were developing a device that would transmit and receive the human voice. •The telephone is considered a very important invention because it has provided various benefits: it has offered a fast communication mode for us and is used for private and commercial use, has reduced the distances and people can communicate with each other in just a couple of seconds and it is the cheapest mode of interaction. The development of internet infrastructure is also possible because of telephone. The telephone has even increased the levels of socialization and interaction among people and it has played a major role in making this world a global village. •By inventing the telephone Alexander changed the way people live. •The Bell Telephone Company was founded by Alexander Graham Bell in 1877 to build a nationwide telephone system. By 1881, there were 132,700 Bell telephones in homes. By 1930, 15,193,000 phones were in service. •His father, Alexander Melville was a professor of elocution and speech at Edinburgh University and his mother Eliza was almost deaf, losing her hearing at twelve. It seems only natural that Bell would have an interest in speech. •The telephone is the most important invention in history because it’s brought people together from different cultures from around the world. It makes communication easier and more efficient. •Bell experimented with the telegraphy to improve on its uses and this was how he accomplished the invention of the telephone. His understanding of sound and music and his great love of communication aided him in this invention. He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Content: He figured out that if you use different pitches that several voice notes could be sent at the same time on one wire. •The telephone was invented by accident when Mr. Bell was trying to invent a device that could send more than one telegram at the same time. This device took sound waves, converted them into an electrical current, and then reconverted them back to sound on the other end, and this is how the telephone started. Alexander Bell also invented the microphone and the speaker. Alexander Graham Bell Speaking into Early Telephone, 1876 •Telephone is the Greek word for “far sound.” This is how the telephone became what it is today. Show full text
https://prezi.com/zsdchrofuggg/telephone-the-most-important-invention-of-modern-time/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_808063601#2_1570843808
Title: Olive Oil Price List in India (1st Jun 2021), Buy Olive Oil at Best Price in India - Pricee.com Headings: Olive Oil Price List in India Olive Oil Price List in India 153 Results Available For Olive Oil Price In India Olive Oil Price in India 2021 Olive Oil Price List in India on 1st June 2021 Olive Oil Price in India What is olive oil and what are its benefits? Best Olive Oil Brands In India DiSano Extra Virgin Olive Oil Borges Extra Virgin Olive Oil Figaro Extra Virgin Olive Oil Del Monte Extra Virgin Olive Oil Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil Content: We have sorted the best deals in town for your help to easily and quickly pick your next Olive Oil from the list of best Olive Oil in India. The best Olive Oil brands with the Olive Oil price list across all types of Olive Oil at your disposal to help you pick the most popular Olive Oil in a jiffy. With updated prices, discounts and offers you can be sure of not missing any latest deal or offer. Compare Olive Oil prices, features, specifications and pick your selected Olive Oil today using the best deals and offers. Using your customized permutation combinations you can shortlist the list to reach your choice of the latest and the best Olive Oil models, its easy to even drill down to the latest Olive Oil model or the best Olive Oil at lowest prices using these filters we provide. What is olive oil and what are its benefits? Olive oil is a natural oil obtained from olives, the fruit of the olive tree. It is used in cooking while frying food. It has many benefits such as it prevents the risk of heart disease, protects against stroke and cancers, and lowers the risk of type 2 diseases. The oil is the best for brains and bones.
https://pricee.com/olive-oil/olive-oil-products-price-in-india
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_808063601#3_1570845719
Title: Olive Oil Price List in India (1st Jun 2021), Buy Olive Oil at Best Price in India - Pricee.com Headings: Olive Oil Price List in India Olive Oil Price List in India 153 Results Available For Olive Oil Price In India Olive Oil Price in India 2021 Olive Oil Price List in India on 1st June 2021 Olive Oil Price in India What is olive oil and what are its benefits? Best Olive Oil Brands In India DiSano Extra Virgin Olive Oil Borges Extra Virgin Olive Oil Figaro Extra Virgin Olive Oil Del Monte Extra Virgin Olive Oil Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil Content: What is olive oil and what are its benefits? Olive oil is a natural oil obtained from olives, the fruit of the olive tree. It is used in cooking while frying food. It has many benefits such as it prevents the risk of heart disease, protects against stroke and cancers, and lowers the risk of type 2 diseases. The oil is the best for brains and bones. Best Olive Oil Brands In India DiSano Extra Virgin Olive Oil This olive oil from DiSano is organic and made by the first cold pressing of raw olives. The oil is manufactured and packed in Spain. It is rich in antioxidants and vitamin E, and also high in MUFA and PUFA. It has zero cholesterol and low saturated fat. Borges Extra Virgin Olive Oil This olive oil from Borges has captivating flavours of olives.
https://pricee.com/olive-oil/olive-oil-products-price-in-india
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_808063601#4_1570847251
Title: Olive Oil Price List in India (1st Jun 2021), Buy Olive Oil at Best Price in India - Pricee.com Headings: Olive Oil Price List in India Olive Oil Price List in India 153 Results Available For Olive Oil Price In India Olive Oil Price in India 2021 Olive Oil Price List in India on 1st June 2021 Olive Oil Price in India What is olive oil and what are its benefits? Best Olive Oil Brands In India DiSano Extra Virgin Olive Oil Borges Extra Virgin Olive Oil Figaro Extra Virgin Olive Oil Del Monte Extra Virgin Olive Oil Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil Content: Best Olive Oil Brands In India DiSano Extra Virgin Olive Oil This olive oil from DiSano is organic and made by the first cold pressing of raw olives. The oil is manufactured and packed in Spain. It is rich in antioxidants and vitamin E, and also high in MUFA and PUFA. It has zero cholesterol and low saturated fat. Borges Extra Virgin Olive Oil This olive oil from Borges has captivating flavours of olives. The oil can be used as a substitute for butter and ghee. It is best for salads and dressings. Figaro Extra Virgin Olive Oil This olive oil from Figaro has a rich flavour and aroma of olives. It has many health benefits such as regulating cholesterol levels. It is free from argemone oil, and also suits for dressing salads.
https://pricee.com/olive-oil/olive-oil-products-price-in-india
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_808063601#5_1570848757
Title: Olive Oil Price List in India (1st Jun 2021), Buy Olive Oil at Best Price in India - Pricee.com Headings: Olive Oil Price List in India Olive Oil Price List in India 153 Results Available For Olive Oil Price In India Olive Oil Price in India 2021 Olive Oil Price List in India on 1st June 2021 Olive Oil Price in India What is olive oil and what are its benefits? Best Olive Oil Brands In India DiSano Extra Virgin Olive Oil Borges Extra Virgin Olive Oil Figaro Extra Virgin Olive Oil Del Monte Extra Virgin Olive Oil Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil Content: The oil can be used as a substitute for butter and ghee. It is best for salads and dressings. Figaro Extra Virgin Olive Oil This olive oil from Figaro has a rich flavour and aroma of olives. It has many health benefits such as regulating cholesterol levels. It is free from argemone oil, and also suits for dressing salads. Del Monte Extra Virgin Olive Oil The olive oil from Del Monte is obtained from the processing of olives through a cold extraction process which gives great flavour and nice aroma. It has the highest monosaturated fatty acids. It is free from argemone oil. Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil The Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil is the number 1 and premium quality olive oil brand from Tuscany, Italy. It is rich in Omega 9 unsaturated fat, and also helps in regulating the cardi-circulatory system.
https://pricee.com/olive-oil/olive-oil-products-price-in-india
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_808063601#6_1570850362
Title: Olive Oil Price List in India (1st Jun 2021), Buy Olive Oil at Best Price in India - Pricee.com Headings: Olive Oil Price List in India Olive Oil Price List in India 153 Results Available For Olive Oil Price In India Olive Oil Price in India 2021 Olive Oil Price List in India on 1st June 2021 Olive Oil Price in India What is olive oil and what are its benefits? Best Olive Oil Brands In India DiSano Extra Virgin Olive Oil Borges Extra Virgin Olive Oil Figaro Extra Virgin Olive Oil Del Monte Extra Virgin Olive Oil Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil Content: Del Monte Extra Virgin Olive Oil The olive oil from Del Monte is obtained from the processing of olives through a cold extraction process which gives great flavour and nice aroma. It has the highest monosaturated fatty acids. It is free from argemone oil. Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil The Bertolli Extra Light Tasting Olive Oil is the number 1 and premium quality olive oil brand from Tuscany, Italy. It is rich in Omega 9 unsaturated fat, and also helps in regulating the cardi-circulatory system. The oil is best for frying and sauteing.
https://pricee.com/olive-oil/olive-oil-products-price-in-india
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_820345532#3_1601198286
Title: William Wordsworth: Facts About Famous Poet - Primary Facts Headings: William Wordsworth: Facts About Famous Poet William Wordsworth: Facts About Famous Poet Post navigation Content: In 1796, William Wordsworth wrote his only play, which was turned down by a London theatre. It was called The Borderers and was a tragedy set during King Henry III’s reign. Wordsworth’s sister, Dorothy, was also a well known poet and author. Comic Mike Myers is a relative of Wordsworth – he is the poet’s first cousin, 7 times removed. He became Poet Laureate in 1843, although wrote no poetry after being given the title. He also received an honorary degree from Oxford University in 1838. William Wordsworth died in April 1850 from a disease of the lungs. He is buried in a churchyard in Grasmere and his family home at Dove Cottage is now a museum. Post navigation Anne Fine Facts Famous Poets
https://primaryfacts.com/3646/william-wordsworth-facts-about-famous-poet/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_821397595#4_1603434151
Title: What Does Tough and Chewy Steak Mean? - Prime 13 Woodfire Grill Headings: What Does Tough and Chewy Steak Mean? What Does Tough and Chewy Steak Mean? What Tough and Chewy Steak Mean Content: Upon exposure to heat, the steak changes color to turn into some golden brown color that makes your mouth water when you see the cooked meat. Meat science explains that the more fats a steak has, the more flavorful it is. It goes further to explain that a piece of meat harvested from a fatty animal or its fat rich part of its body, the more flavorful and juicy it is. Hence, a piece of steak from parts of animal with less fat content will be a little tough and chewy. Cooking Method Although heat is responsible for converting fat in a steak to flavors, too much of it will only erode the fats and juices from the meat. There is a specific amount of temperatures to cook each type of steak. An undercooked steak will be a little tough since all the fat has not be converted into flavors and the juice has not started to flow, hence the steak is tough and chewy. An overcooked steak on the other hand, will be tougher and chewier since heat erodes all the fats and juices, leaving it hard. Connective Tissues Connective tissue is the general term for ligaments, tendons and collagen membranes that hold the piece of steak together. The more connective tissues a steak has, the tougher and chewy a steak will be, since these are also responsible for the toughness in a steak.
https://prime-13.com/what-does-tough-and-chewy-steak-mean/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_821397595#5_1603435810
Title: What Does Tough and Chewy Steak Mean? - Prime 13 Woodfire Grill Headings: What Does Tough and Chewy Steak Mean? What Does Tough and Chewy Steak Mean? What Tough and Chewy Steak Mean Content: There is a specific amount of temperatures to cook each type of steak. An undercooked steak will be a little tough since all the fat has not be converted into flavors and the juice has not started to flow, hence the steak is tough and chewy. An overcooked steak on the other hand, will be tougher and chewier since heat erodes all the fats and juices, leaving it hard. Connective Tissues Connective tissue is the general term for ligaments, tendons and collagen membranes that hold the piece of steak together. The more connective tissues a steak has, the tougher and chewy a steak will be, since these are also responsible for the toughness in a steak. To avoid this toughness and chewiness, you are advised to order steaks that are not close to the muscle parts of an animal. This is because steaks from muscle rich parts of an animal have more connective tissues due to the muscles. The Animal From Which the Steak is Harvested Meat science has it that an old animal has tougher and chewy steak since its meat has more muscle fibers than a young one. The type of food an animal is fed will also determine the texture of its meat. Meat scientists advise that for tender and flavorful steak, you should harvest it from younger animals that have been fed with grass fodder.
https://prime-13.com/what-does-tough-and-chewy-steak-mean/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_821673468#0_1604072603
Title: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters - Prime-writing.com Headings: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Three Ways Regarding how Human Activities Make an Impact on Natural Disasters Lakes that Are Disappearing Earthquakes Flooding FREE Extras: We Guarantee Paper Format Prime-Writing.com Testimonials Content: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters - Prime-writing.com Home / Blog / Writing Papers Guide / Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Table of Contents Three Ways Regarding how Human Activities Make an Impact on Natural Disasters Lakes that Are Disappearing Find Out the Price for an Essay Earthquakes Flooding Related Blog Posts from category "Writing Papers Guide" Three Ways Regarding how Human Activities Make an Impact on Natural Disasters The death of 61,000 of people has been caused this year by natural disasters. What is more, 60% of victims have been killed by tsunami that happened in the Indian Ocean. According to statistics, the number of reports about natural disasters is increasing because of advancements in communication technology as well as better media reports. Frankly speaking, two thirds of this rise is real. It should be noted that it is a consequence of an increase in such disasters as tsunamis floods, droughts, and typhoons. Some people still hesitate whether humans really trigger natural disasters or not. It is estimated that human emissions do impact on storm surges and droughts. Believe it or not, it is 100% that natural disasters are influenced by human activities. Human beings also cause occurrence of sudden natural events that result in great damage or the loss of life. Here are a few of the natural disasters that are triggered by humans.
https://prime-writing.com/blog/human-activities-influence-natural-disasters.php
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_821673468#1_1604074650
Title: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters - Prime-writing.com Headings: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Three Ways Regarding how Human Activities Make an Impact on Natural Disasters Lakes that Are Disappearing Earthquakes Flooding FREE Extras: We Guarantee Paper Format Prime-Writing.com Testimonials Content: Some people still hesitate whether humans really trigger natural disasters or not. It is estimated that human emissions do impact on storm surges and droughts. Believe it or not, it is 100% that natural disasters are influenced by human activities. Human beings also cause occurrence of sudden natural events that result in great damage or the loss of life. Here are a few of the natural disasters that are triggered by humans. Lakes that Are Disappearing Lake Peigneur, located in Louisiana, poured into the ground in November the year 1980. It is proven that the salt mine located beneath the lake was drilled into by a Texaco oil rig. As a result, this oil rig pulled the plug in the lake and the water sank into the mine. Thus, the shafts were filled and the salt was dissolved by the water. In spite of the fact that this incident didn’t have any victims, the ecosystem was really affected.
https://prime-writing.com/blog/human-activities-influence-natural-disasters.php
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_821673468#3_1604077617
Title: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters - Prime-writing.com Headings: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Three Ways Regarding how Human Activities Make an Impact on Natural Disasters Lakes that Are Disappearing Earthquakes Flooding FREE Extras: We Guarantee Paper Format Prime-Writing.com Testimonials Content: What is more, this impact is permanent. A few more lakes have disappeared due to careless and unreasonable human activities. Moreover, waste pollution contributes to damaging water bodies. Human beings dispose emissions from factories and plants into seas and lakes and make water bodies dirty, unfit for further use. Earthquakes It has been stated by geologists that people cannot be the cause of real volcanoes. Nevertheless, we are able to make the ground shake staggeringly. If humans drill oil, for example, tremors are made common. In addition, mining operations can be the main factor that adds up to the frequency of tremors. In fact, the normal stress existing in rocks is redistributed by these activities. Thus, triggering movement appears.
https://prime-writing.com/blog/human-activities-influence-natural-disasters.php
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_821673468#4_1604078958
Title: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters - Prime-writing.com Headings: Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Human Activities Influence Natural Disasters Three Ways Regarding how Human Activities Make an Impact on Natural Disasters Lakes that Are Disappearing Earthquakes Flooding FREE Extras: We Guarantee Paper Format Prime-Writing.com Testimonials Content: Nevertheless, we are able to make the ground shake staggeringly. If humans drill oil, for example, tremors are made common. In addition, mining operations can be the main factor that adds up to the frequency of tremors. In fact, the normal stress existing in rocks is redistributed by these activities. Thus, triggering movement appears. Flooding Scientists also resort to cloud seeding, which makes a bad impact on nature and causes flooding. This process is known as weather modification, but the question is whether it can be the result of flooding. In cloud seeding, the clouds are powdered with silver iodide in order to get moisture out of other clouds. In such a way, the water may condense on. In the long term, floods can cause such natural disasters as deforestation, urban development (because of it, the water flows into streams when the rain is heavy and a rather high flood peaks appear), and destruction of natural wetlands.
https://prime-writing.com/blog/human-activities-influence-natural-disasters.php
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_822162727#12_1605044502
Title: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Headings: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Governor Cuomo's Content: They used a loose clause in the constitution and endorsed the formation of a national bank against the outcry of anti-federalists. In February 1971, a national bank with a government charter had been formed (Edwards, Wattenberg, and Lineberry 389). At the end of 1971, Hamilton proposed the passage of tariffs to help the national government in the construction of industries. The anti-federalists who hailed from an agricultural South considered protectionist tariffs as a move to make the North rich and strong. Although federalists had won over debt payment by the national government and creation of a bank, anti-federalists lobbied for the decline of tariff creation. There was strong opposition against this bill and it failed (Kennedy 131). How the Contemporary Democratic Party fits into the Debate The present Democratic Party has embraced the ideals of anti-federalism. The party strongly focuses on problems surrounding individuals and does not take the responsibilities of the states that are in debt or economic recession. The party is giving tax cuts to poor working class families and helping students in the university to pay their education loans. The Healthcare Bill popularly known as “Obamacare” aims at providing all citizens with healthcare.
https://primeessays.com/samples/politics/debate-on-federalist-and-anti-federalist-ideals.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_822162727#13_1605046231
Title: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Headings: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Governor Cuomo's Content: There was strong opposition against this bill and it failed (Kennedy 131). How the Contemporary Democratic Party fits into the Debate The present Democratic Party has embraced the ideals of anti-federalism. The party strongly focuses on problems surrounding individuals and does not take the responsibilities of the states that are in debt or economic recession. The party is giving tax cuts to poor working class families and helping students in the university to pay their education loans. The Healthcare Bill popularly known as “Obamacare” aims at providing all citizens with healthcare. In addition to that, they believe in providing every family with clean energy, security, retirement benefits, battling illegitimate drugs, access to technology, and education among others. The party also aims at reducing the national deficit and creating jobs for millions of Americans. In addition to that, the party has put measures to ensure that the American economy does not slide back into recession. Just like the anti-federalists, the party has declined to impose unfair tariffs and taxes on the working class. The party claims that unfair taxing system where the elite are given tax cuts is responsible for the creation of a very big gap between the richest and the poorest Americans.
https://primeessays.com/samples/politics/debate-on-federalist-and-anti-federalist-ideals.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_822162727#14_1605047981
Title: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Headings: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Governor Cuomo's Content: In addition to that, they believe in providing every family with clean energy, security, retirement benefits, battling illegitimate drugs, access to technology, and education among others. The party also aims at reducing the national deficit and creating jobs for millions of Americans. In addition to that, the party has put measures to ensure that the American economy does not slide back into recession. Just like the anti-federalists, the party has declined to impose unfair tariffs and taxes on the working class. The party claims that unfair taxing system where the elite are given tax cuts is responsible for the creation of a very big gap between the richest and the poorest Americans. The party also focuses on making the lives of Americans better by enacting laws that prohibit immigration into the U.S. A reduction in immigrants implies that legal Americans will have a higher bargaining power at the work place. Immigrants often use services that they did not help in putting in place like the healthcare system, roads, and houses among others and accept lower salaries. Finally, the Democrats are pro-abortion. They believe that Americans have the right to choice; a fundamental right entrenched in the Bill of Rights.
https://primeessays.com/samples/politics/debate-on-federalist-and-anti-federalist-ideals.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_822162727#15_1605049667
Title: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Headings: Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Debate on Federalist and Anti-Federalist Ideals Governor Cuomo's Content: The party also focuses on making the lives of Americans better by enacting laws that prohibit immigration into the U.S. A reduction in immigrants implies that legal Americans will have a higher bargaining power at the work place. Immigrants often use services that they did not help in putting in place like the healthcare system, roads, and houses among others and accept lower salaries. Finally, the Democrats are pro-abortion. They believe that Americans have the right to choice; a fundamental right entrenched in the Bill of Rights. Democrats believe that the current citizens should get a good life first before thinking
https://primeessays.com/samples/politics/debate-on-federalist-and-anti-federalist-ideals.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_833394515#12_1631275508
Title: The Use of Posters in Education | PrintMePoster.com Blog Headings: The Use of Posters in Education The Use of Posters in Education Mathematics A Bright Multiplication Table Physics Archimedes' principle. The buoyant force acting on an object is equal to the weight of the displaced fluid Chemistry Structural chemical formula and model of vitamin B12 - cyanocobalamin Geography Colored political world map with names of countries, oceans Languages A Flamenco Dancer Literature To be, or not be, that is the question - text on a slate blackboard against red barn wood History A Poster Dedicated to the 4th of July Biology A Tooth Anatomy Health The Lungs of a Non-Smoker and a Smoker Physical Education Kinds of Sports Art An Abstract Painting Astronomy The Solar System Image Economics The Economical Project Mind Map Sociology The Maslow Pyramid of Human Needs Content: ​ Structural chemical formula and model of vitamin B12 - cyanocobalamin ​ Geography When we talk about geography, the first thing that comes to our mind is, of course, a map. There are so many variants of maps nowadays, that all of them will take too much space in a class. It's recommended not to attach maps to the walls too strongly so that you are able to change them while having different themes of lessons. However, the geographical and political maps of the world and of your country are considered to be classic and you are free to have them in your class permanently. ​ Colored political world map with names of countries, oceans ​ Languages English or any other language lesson is also a class, which will be much more interesting if some images are used. Firstly, the use of pictures while learning the vocabulary raises the level of memorization. It's a proven fact that all students, not only children, learn the words faster if the objects are visualized. Secondly, the main grammar rules can also be depicted on posters in order not only to be visualized but also to minimize the use of incorrect language during the lesson. Thirdly, some teachers use motivating pictures about the importance of being literate. It's believed that they stimulate the pupils for being more interested in the subject.
https://printmeposter.com/blog/the-use-of-posters-in-education/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_835098172#5_1634976556
Title: Best Vitamins for Nail Growth 2020: Reviews & Guide - PRIORY OF TEN - Beauty - Fashion Headings: Best Vitamins for Nail Growth 2020: Reviews & Guide Best Vitamins for Nail Growth 2020: Reviews & Guide What Nutrients Do Our Body Needs for Nail growth? Vitamins Minerals General Nail Health Nails Grow Protect Nails Top 10 Best Vitamins for Nail Growth 1. Biotin by Sports Research (5000mcg) 2. Brio Complete Nail Vitamins 3. HERdiet Hair & Nail Growth Supplement 4. Madina Vitamins 5. EZ Melts Biotin for Nails, Skin, and Hair 6. 24Bio Hair, Nail, and Skin Supplement 7. Advanced Formula Hair, Skin and Nail Vitamins 8. Pure Biotin by NailsByWatsana 9. Biobiot Nutrition Extra Strength 10. Bronson Ultra Biotin Other Things That You Can Do To Get Longer Nails Diet Nail Maintenance Moisturize Nail Polish Conclusion Content: Bronson Ultra Biotin Other Things That You Can Do To Get Longer Nails Diet Nail Maintenance Moisturize Nail Polish Conclusion Vitamins Some of the vitamins enclosed in prenatal multivitamins improve nail growth and health such as for embodying B-complex vitamin, or biotin, that are still as nutritions, B complex, vitamin B complex, vitamins B, B vitamins, and vitamin B-12. Consistent with the University of Maryland center, B complex could relieve symptoms of poor nail health, like cacophonous or crispness, and promote healthy growth of the nail. B is significant for general cell growth such as nails and hair grow comparatively throughout speedy life, they need plentiful B vitamins. Minerals In addition to our vitamins, taking bound minerals will improve our nail health and growth. Magnesium is one of a significant mineral for life processes and varied organs that you can find in several fruits, whole grains, legumes, seaweed, and a few more vegetables. One sign of a mineral deficiency is the poor health of nail or slow growth of the nail. General Nail Health Flax seed oils, made in polyunsaturated fatty acid, additionally might provide our nail growth and overall health. The Flax seed oils might relieve nail splitting, cracking, crispness or drying. To alleviate plant life issues around your fingernails, you may strive for tea leaf, reishi mushrooms, milk weed or tea tree oil. The University of Mary Land Centre cites all of them as ancient flavorer supplements for nail health and growth although their use isn’t scientifically proved.
https://prioryoften.com/best-vitamins-for-nail-growth/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_836685166#8_1638083867
Title: Can You Get a Degree In Prison? - Prison Insight Headings: Can You Get a Degree In Prison? Can You Get a Degree In Prison? Can you get a degree in prison? What are the education opportunities available in prison? The value of prison education About the Author Natalie Content: Other free education options behind bars include numerous vocational programs that help an inmate acquire skills they can use to get a job when they are released. There a ton of different vocational programs in prison, but it depends on which facility the inmate is locked up in. Where I was incarcerated, some of the vocational options were cosmetology, building trades, and horticulture. There are also classes inmates can take that help them with things like parenting skills, financial planning, putting together a resume, and mental health. The value of prison education The value of an inmate getting an education while in prison can’t be underestimated. Prison education has been proven to reduce criminal recidivism and improve economic opportunities for individuals serving prison sentences, as well as former inmates transitioning into civilian life. Unfortunately, access to opportunities for education in prison are very limited, especially for inmates with college degrees. When inmates are released from prison, they have trouble furthering their education because of limited access to student financial aid. Even though inmates have a number of limitations and obstacles, those who find ways to receive an education and earn a diploma or degree can dramatically improve their future prospects. Should inmates be forced to go to school while they are behind bars if they don’t have a high school diploma or GED?
https://prisoninsight.com/can-you-get-a-degree-in-prison/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_836731142#3_1638191131
Title: Can You Have Phones In Prison? - Prison Insight Headings: Can You Have Phones In Prison? Can You Have Phones In Prison? Where do inmates hide cell phones? When can inmates make phone calls? How much is an inmate phone call? What happens if you get caught in prison with a phone? About the Author Natalie Content: It should come as no surprise that inmates are not allowed to have cell phones, but they do make their way into prisons and jails all across the country. Cell phones are one of the most-smuggled items into prisons, and it usually happens via prison guards or other prison staff. There are security measures in place when prison staff enters a facility, but the process isn’t as invasive as what you have to go through when you are a visitor. As a result, it is much easier for a member of the prison staff to get cell phones inside compared to a visitor. It is also very lucrative because inmates will pay a lot of money for a phone and a chargerㅡ sometimes up to $1,000. This is touched on in episodes of Orange Is The New Black, as phones can be just as profitable as drugs. Since cell phones aren’t illegal like drugs, many people who work in prisons aren’t necessarily opposed to the idea. However, many states and jurisdictions are starting to pass laws about bringing electronics into correctional facilities, and if you get caught, you can face criminal charges. But, I’ll talk more about that in a minute. In some prisons, cell phones can simply be tossed over the fence by a friend or family member, and the inmate just has to set up the time and location so they can grab it.
https://prisoninsight.com/can-you-have-phones-in-prison/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_837126146#3_1638900468
Title: Why do Inmates go on Death Row? - Prison Insight Headings: Why do Inmates go on Death Row? Why do Inmates go on Death Row? Why are inmates on death row for so long? How many inmates are on death row? Can you visit prisoners on death row? About the Author Natalie Content: Why are inmates on death row for so long? Inmates are sentenced to death row when they have been convicted of taking the life of at least one other human being. Currently, all of the prisoners on death row in the United States have been convicted of murder. However, in our nation’s history, the death penalty has been used in cases of rape, specifically against black defendants with white victims. When the Supreme Court reinstated the death penalty in 1976, they did leave open the possibility of someone receiving the sentence for a crime other than murder, like rape or armed robbery. But, they soon changed their position and ruled that the death penalty can’t be applied in a case where a death did not occur. There is still a question about whether or not the death penalty can be used in crimes against the government, like treason or espionage. Inmates who are sentenced to death are usually in prison for two decades or more before they are executed. The reason inmates are on death row for so long is because they must have the opportunity to exhaust all appeals before the death sentence is carried out. Many individuals who have been sentenced to death have claimed to be innocent.
https://prisoninsight.com/why-do-inmates-go-on-death-row/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_837126146#4_1638902137
Title: Why do Inmates go on Death Row? - Prison Insight Headings: Why do Inmates go on Death Row? Why do Inmates go on Death Row? Why are inmates on death row for so long? How many inmates are on death row? Can you visit prisoners on death row? About the Author Natalie Content: But, they soon changed their position and ruled that the death penalty can’t be applied in a case where a death did not occur. There is still a question about whether or not the death penalty can be used in crimes against the government, like treason or espionage. Inmates who are sentenced to death are usually in prison for two decades or more before they are executed. The reason inmates are on death row for so long is because they must have the opportunity to exhaust all appeals before the death sentence is carried out. Many individuals who have been sentenced to death have claimed to be innocent. And, when DNA evidence became available in the United States in the early 1990s, more than 20 death row inmates ended up being exonerated and released. Other inmates on death row have had their convictions overturned based on prosecutorial misconduct, weak cases with lack of evidence, and ineffective assistance of counsel. The Death Penalty Information Center also has a list of ten inmates who they claim were “executed but possibly innocent.” Because there have been people sentenced to death row who have later been revealed to be innocent, some believe our system should not be swift to execute. How many inmates are on death row?
https://prisoninsight.com/why-do-inmates-go-on-death-row/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_843725147#15_1654066550
Title: Social Networking Privacy: How to be Safe, Secure and Social | Privacy Rights Clearinghouse Headings: Social Networking Privacy: How to be Safe, Secure and Social Social Networking Privacy: How to be Safe, Secure and Social 1. What information are you sharing when you use social networks? 2. How may your social networking information be used and shared? 3. Privacy policies 4. Tips When registering an account: General privacy tips for using social networks Content: The National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) has issued a number of rulings and recommendations involving questions about employer social media policies. The NLRB has indicated that these cases are extremely fact-specific. It has provided the following general guidance, however: Employer policies should not be so sweeping that they prohibit the kinds of activity protected by federal labor law, such as the discussion of wages or working conditions among employees. An employee’s comments on social media are generally not protected if they are mere gripes not made in relation to group activity among employees. 3. Privacy policies Most people skip over the privacy policy when joining a social network. However, users can learn a lot of useful information by reviewing a privacy policy before signing up for service. A social network’s privacy policy will explain how the social network will collect and use information about people who visit the site. When reviewing a privacy policy, remember:
https://privacyrights.org/consumer-guides/social-networking-privacy-how-be-safe-secure-and-social
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_850996566#0_1668459315
Title: Qualified Improvement Property | Bloomberg Tax & Accounting Headings: Qualified Improvement Property Qualified Improvement Property Last Updated Jan. 26, 2021 What is considered qualified improvement property? Subscriber-only resource: OnPoint: Qualified Improvement Property How does the CARES Act affect qualified improvement property? Download: Cost Segregation and Fixed Assets: What You Need to Know What is the bonus depreciation rate for QIP? In Brief: Correcting the “Retail Glitch” What tax opportunities are offered under the CARES Act by reclassification of QIP? Subscriber-only resource: Portfolio 532-2nd: First-Year Expensing and Additional Depreciation Key IRC Sections §168 §179 Tax Research and Practice Tools Portfolio 531-3rd: Depreciation: MACRS and ACRS Cost Recovery of Building Improvements Placed in Service 2004–Present Tax Practice Series: Depreciation of Realty and Tangible Property Content: Qualified Improvement Property | Bloomberg Tax & Accounting TOPIC Qualified Improvement Property Last Updated Jan. 26, 2021 Qualified improvement property is an improvement made by the taxpayer to an interior portion of a nonresidential building if the improvement is placed in service after the building was first placed in service. Any enlargement of the building, any elevator or escalator, and any internal structural framework do not qualify. Qualified improvement property is depreciated using the straight-line depreciation method. Definition CARES Act Bonus Depreciation Tax Opportunities Resources What is considered qualified improvement property? To qualify, the improvement must be: – Made by the taxpayer – Made to an interior portion of a nonresidential (commercial, retail, factory) building – Made to a building that is already in service Exclusions include: – Building enlargements – Elevators and escalators – Internal structural framework Subscriber-only resource: OnPoint: Qualified Improvement Property Download this presentation to learn about the key takeaways from the CARES Act provisions related to qualified improvement property. How does the CARES Act affect qualified improvement property?
https://pro.bloombergtax.com/qualified-improvement-property/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_853506866#3_1674069851
Title: Marriage statistics, separation & infidelity statistics Headings: Marriage statistics, separation & infidelity statistics Marriage statistics, separation & infidelity statistics Incidence of marriage Most adults have married only once Most people who had ever divorced are currently married Widowed statistics Differences in spousal ages Duration of marriage and separation Infidelity statistics Content: Most people in this age group who had experienced widowhood were currently widowed (19 percent of men and 55 percent of women). Differences in spousal ages Women are 2.5 years younger than their husbands, on average. For first marriages, an increased percentage of women are the same age or older than the men they marry. About 38 percent of women in their first marriage, who married between 1945 and 1964, were the same age or older than their husbands, compared with 48 percent of currently married women in their first marriage who married between 1970 and 1989. Spouses in their second marriages are about twice as likely to have at least a 5-year age gap as people in their first marriage, 40 percent and less than 20 percent respectively. Duration of marriage and separation First marriages which end in divorce last 7 to 8 years, on average. The median number of years a first marriage lasted which ended in divorce was about 8 years for men and women overall. The median time from marriage to separation was shorter, at about 6.6 years with about 1 year between separation and divorce. Half of those who remarry after a divorce from a first marriage do so within about 3 years. Half of the men and women who remarried after divorcing from their first marriage did so in about 3 years.
https://proactivemindfulness.com/relationships/statistics.htm
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_855226405#0_1677417827
Title: 7 Bounty Hunter Metal Detector Reviews: Comparison Guide Headings: Page Contents (Click Icon To Open/Close) Why Choose Bounty Hunter Brand? Bounty Hunter Metal Detectors Compared What To Look For In a Quality Metal Detector Type of Detector Hunting Location & Frequency of Use Metal Detector Features Search Depth & Modes Coil Type Sensitivity & Frequency Price & Warranty 7 Bounty Hunter Metal Detectors Reviewed 1. Bounty Hunter Land Ranger Pro Our Top Pick 2. Bounty Hunter TK4 Best Bounty Hunter model for beginners 3. Bounty Hunter Discovery 3300 maximum detection range 4. Bounty Hunter PL PROQD Best multi-purpose metal detector 5. Bounty Hunter SS2 Sharpshooter II Best waterproof bounty hunter 6. Bounty Hunter Gold Digger Best lightweight model 7. Bounty Hunter BHJS Junior Best bounty hunter junior metal detector for kids Comparing Bounty Hunter to Other Metal Detector Brands How to Use a Bounty Hunter Metal Detector People also Ask (FAQs) How deep does a Bounty Hunter metal detector go? Can a Bounty Hunter metal detector find gold? How can I make a metal detector last longer? What are some unique features of this brand? Where is the best place to find top deals on Bounty Hunter metal detectors? Conclusion Content: 7 Bounty Hunter Metal Detector Reviews: Comparison Guide Skip to content Fitness Equipment Cardio Machines Exercise Bikes Strength Building Treadmills Ellipticals Stretching Outdoor Gear Kayaks & Boats Kayaking Gear SUPs Mobility Devices Snow Blowers Metal Detectors Shoes & Apparel Home & Garden Smokers & Grills Roomba Reviews Roomba Comparisons Other Vacuums Generators Pressure Washers Electronics GPS Units DJ Equipment Subwoofers Speakers Brand Comparison Bounty Hunter Metal Detector Reviewed Find out if the Bounty Hunter metal detector brand is the best product for you. November 16, 2020 by JohnL Instance 1 Everyone has wished they could be like Indiana Jones one day, and for some, getting a metal detector out and looking for relics is their way of making that happen. From coins to jewelry, metal detecting hobbyists can make a little extra cash from their favorite pastime. Having a quality but affordable detector on your side can help you find more items with ease and potentially put more money in your pocket. A well-known and trusted US company, Bounty Hunter metal detectors are highly in demand; but are they worth it? Page Contents (Click Icon To Open/Close) Why Choose Bounty Hunter Brand? Bounty Hunter Metal Detectors Compared What To Look For In a Quality Metal Detector 7 Bounty Hunter Metal Detectors Reviewed 1. Bounty Hunter Land Ranger Pro 2.
https://probablyinteractive.com/bounty-hunter-metal-detector-reviews/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_855226405#11_1677445617
Title: 7 Bounty Hunter Metal Detector Reviews: Comparison Guide Headings: Page Contents (Click Icon To Open/Close) Why Choose Bounty Hunter Brand? Bounty Hunter Metal Detectors Compared What To Look For In a Quality Metal Detector Type of Detector Hunting Location & Frequency of Use Metal Detector Features Search Depth & Modes Coil Type Sensitivity & Frequency Price & Warranty 7 Bounty Hunter Metal Detectors Reviewed 1. Bounty Hunter Land Ranger Pro Our Top Pick 2. Bounty Hunter TK4 Best Bounty Hunter model for beginners 3. Bounty Hunter Discovery 3300 maximum detection range 4. Bounty Hunter PL PROQD Best multi-purpose metal detector 5. Bounty Hunter SS2 Sharpshooter II Best waterproof bounty hunter 6. Bounty Hunter Gold Digger Best lightweight model 7. Bounty Hunter BHJS Junior Best bounty hunter junior metal detector for kids Comparing Bounty Hunter to Other Metal Detector Brands How to Use a Bounty Hunter Metal Detector People also Ask (FAQs) How deep does a Bounty Hunter metal detector go? Can a Bounty Hunter metal detector find gold? How can I make a metal detector last longer? What are some unique features of this brand? Where is the best place to find top deals on Bounty Hunter metal detectors? Conclusion Content: Bounty Hunter Land Ranger Pro On Sale Today Bounty Hunter Land Ranger Pro Metal Detector Our Top Pick Sensitivity Levels Button adjusted low to high Maximum Search Depth Up to 10 inches Weight 2.4 Lbs. Search Modes 7 modes including pinpoint and all-metal Frequency 7.69 kHz Warranty 5 year limited Check Amazon Prices Check Amazon Review One of our top picks on this list, the Bounty Hunter Land Ranger Pro metal detector is an excellent option for any new hobbyist. The 11-inch submersible coil has an excellent detection zone, and the Ranger Pro has seven preset modes to choose from; all metal helps you identify cans from gold while pinpoint mode makes it easy to find where the treasure lies. The 7.69 kHz frequency is higher than many models making it possible to find even more treasure that lies up to 10 inches below the surface. Four different audio tones let you know precisely what is beneath your feet, and ground balancing helps smooth the ride. The large display screen makes it easier than ever to see exactly what is going on, and the padded arms make the Land Ranger Pro one of the most comfortable models for long trips. An extended five-year warranty on construction defects is perfect for any accidents or mistakes that may happen during a hunt. Bounty Hunter Land Ranger Pro metal detector reviews are incredibly positive; they praise how easy and functional the Land Ranger Pro is to use, and they boast about how much they managed to find while hitting the trail.
https://probablyinteractive.com/bounty-hunter-metal-detector-reviews/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_856133150#5_1679297218
Title: Can You Empty a House Before Probate? Headings: Can You Empty a House Before Probate? Can You Empty a House Before Probate? What Happens to the Contents of the Estate House of the Deceased? How to Transfer the Property What Happens to the House When it Enters Probate? How to Clean a House After Probate Steps in Cleaning Out an Estate House How to Sell the House Without Hassle Conveyance to Survivors or a Probate Home Sale What Not to Do with a House in Probate Apply for a Free Quote Content: Probate would need to be completed before you could remove the items. If you’re the personal representative or executor of the estate, you would need to take inventory of the contents of the house as part of recording the estate’s assets. The executor may need to sell off the house to pay any outstanding debts. At this point or when probate is settled, you would gather the items and have an estate sale or divide them among the heirs. How to Transfer the Property To transfer the house from the decedent, the court will provide documents which show the executor will be acting on behalf of the estate. This will give them the power to sell the house and its contents. If the house will go to one of the heirs, the documents will show who is to inherit and allow them the ability to transfer the deed into their name. What Happens to the House When it Enters Probate? When a house is included as part of probate, one of three things will happen. It may be transferred to the person named in the will as the heir.
https://probateadvance.com/can-you-empty-a-house-before-probate/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_856133150#6_1679298944
Title: Can You Empty a House Before Probate? Headings: Can You Empty a House Before Probate? Can You Empty a House Before Probate? What Happens to the Contents of the Estate House of the Deceased? How to Transfer the Property What Happens to the House When it Enters Probate? How to Clean a House After Probate Steps in Cleaning Out an Estate House How to Sell the House Without Hassle Conveyance to Survivors or a Probate Home Sale What Not to Do with a House in Probate Apply for a Free Quote Content: This will give them the power to sell the house and its contents. If the house will go to one of the heirs, the documents will show who is to inherit and allow them the ability to transfer the deed into their name. What Happens to the House When it Enters Probate? When a house is included as part of probate, one of three things will happen. It may be transferred to the person named in the will as the heir. They can choose to keep it or sell it once the title has been transferred into their name. The second scenario is that it may be conveyed to the appropriate heir if there was no will to stipulate where it goes. This is called intestate, which means no will was found. In this situation, assets are disposed of based on the state law. In most cases, the surviving spouse will be the first in line to inherit the house.
https://probateadvance.com/can-you-empty-a-house-before-probate/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_859407448#9_1686633018
Title: Cultured Buttermilk | How To Prepare; Uses in Baking; Benefits Headings: Cultured Buttermilk | How To Prepare; Uses in Baking; Benefits Cultured Buttermilk | How To Prepare; Uses in Baking; Benefits What does cultured buttermilk contain? Cultured buttermilk the traditional way Cultured buttermilk from whole milk Try using almond milk Buttermilk in baking Buttermilk FAQ References Content: 4 cups whole milk A buttermilk culture starter. A mason jar Directions: Stir the starter culture into the milk. Cover it with a towel or lid but avoid capping it tightly. Let it sit at room temperature for 12-24 hours. The buttermilk will become thicker and have a slightly tangy smell. Store it for about a week in the fridge. Try using almond milk If you want to avoid using animal milk, try making a buttermilk substitute with almond milk. If you have a juicer, it’s easy to make your own superb almond milk. Otherwise, use store-bought almond milk.
https://probioticscenter.org/homemade-cultured-buttermilk/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_866029310#1_1700209806
Title: Decision Paralysis: How To Stop Overthinking Your Choices | Procrastination.com Headings: Decision Paralysis: How To Stop Overthinking Your Choices Blog article Decision Paralysis: How To Stop Overthinking Your Choices If we want to find out why people procrastinate it's important to understand the phenomenon of decision paralysis. Complicated choices result in postponed decisions Decide To Live A More Fulfilled Life With Our Book Study: How American retirees procrastinated on their retirement plans Study: To operate or not? Slightly frightening decision-making in doctors It’s not just about the difficulty in choosing, but also the regret that follows Study: Discontent pictures Further reading about decision paralysis Download the free chapter VIDEO: Surprising Science of Happiness VIDEO: Why do people procrastinate now more than ever? See more lessons Share article Tweet Content: For instance, have you ever stood in the aisle of a supermarket unable to choose between 50 different flavors of yogurt? This inability to choose is known as decision paralysis (and also known as choice paralysis or analysis paralysis) and it is an insidious enemy. Decision paralysis occurs when we have to select from options that are difficult to compare. Simply stated, decision paralysis can be described as having such a tough time choosing between action A or B that we pick action C or do nothing at all. The more options we have in front of us, the harder it becomes to choose one. In addition, as complexity or importance is increased, the amount of energy the analysis takes out of us increases, as well. In fact, having to make a choice at all creates negative emotions, which can lead to decision fatigue or a delay in making the decision. In many cases, even if a decision is made, decision paralysis exhausts the decision maker so much, that he or she doesn’t have any energy left to carry out the action itself. This is an important concept for understanding procrastination because when we're supposed to do two important things, but we don’t know which to start first, we often don’t do either. “People don’t make decisions based on what’s the most important, but based on what’s the easiest to evaluate.”
https://procrastination.com/blog/9/decision-paralysis-overthinking-choices
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_876714712#18_1720731892
Title: Moral Licensing - How Your Good Deeds Make You Bad Headings: Moral Licensing – How Your Good Deeds Make You Bad Decision Making Procrastination Productivity Moral Licensing – How Your Good Deeds Make You Bad What is moral licensing? 1. Your past good actions warranting current bad actions: 2. Your future plans justifying the current behavior Why do you morally license yourself? Studies and experiments conducted Examples of moral licensing in daily life 1. Completing a task and taking a break Completing a difficult task serves as a license to waste time before starting another task. 2. Cutting down one habit and increasing another 3. Overindulging in bad habits before a specific date 4. Eating unhealthy because you started working out 5. Spending after saving 6. Blowing money which you won unexpectedly How to stop moral licensing? 1. Use the 2-second rule of receive pause respond How To Use The 2 Second Rule To Avoid Silly Mistakes 2. Ask yourself if you’re under the influence of moral licensing 3. Do not frame your behavior as good or bad How to Make Better Decisions with 7 Fearless Steps Conclusion Content: Spending after saving When you realize you need to save money, you make a plan to cut down your expenses. You start scanning your grocery list to identify where you can reduce the bill. You head out to the supermarket and come back with a cart that costs less than your usual bill. On the way out of the mall, you walk by a sunglasses store. Since you saved some money from your grocery shopping, you believe you can buy a pair of shiny black sunglasses. Overall, you end up with the bigger hole in your pocket. Saving money in one area can lead to a higher expense in another. Saving pennies can turn into an excuse to splurge pounds right under your nose. Such behavior is influenced by the environment too. You have higher chances of spending when you walk in a mall than when you’re at home.
https://productiveclub.com/moral-licensing/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_876714712#19_1720734030
Title: Moral Licensing - How Your Good Deeds Make You Bad Headings: Moral Licensing – How Your Good Deeds Make You Bad Decision Making Procrastination Productivity Moral Licensing – How Your Good Deeds Make You Bad What is moral licensing? 1. Your past good actions warranting current bad actions: 2. Your future plans justifying the current behavior Why do you morally license yourself? Studies and experiments conducted Examples of moral licensing in daily life 1. Completing a task and taking a break Completing a difficult task serves as a license to waste time before starting another task. 2. Cutting down one habit and increasing another 3. Overindulging in bad habits before a specific date 4. Eating unhealthy because you started working out 5. Spending after saving 6. Blowing money which you won unexpectedly How to stop moral licensing? 1. Use the 2-second rule of receive pause respond How To Use The 2 Second Rule To Avoid Silly Mistakes 2. Ask yourself if you’re under the influence of moral licensing 3. Do not frame your behavior as good or bad How to Make Better Decisions with 7 Fearless Steps Conclusion Content: Overall, you end up with the bigger hole in your pocket. Saving money in one area can lead to a higher expense in another. Saving pennies can turn into an excuse to splurge pounds right under your nose. Such behavior is influenced by the environment too. You have higher chances of spending when you walk in a mall than when you’re at home. 6. Blowing money which you won unexpectedly What happens to the people who win a lottery? Stories have shown how most people go back to their old state of financial affairs after a big win. The extra money in their account becomes a reason to go on a trip around the world, buy a lavish sports car and replace the furniture in the house. The same applies to people who visit casinos and earn money with some form of betting.
https://productiveclub.com/moral-licensing/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_877566172#21_1723143198
Title: What the Heck are Value Metrics? Find Yours for Your Product Headings: What the Heck Are Value Metrics? And How To Find Yours? What the Heck Are Value Metrics? And How To Find Yours? A value metric is the way you measure value exchange in your product. What Makes a Good Value Metric? 1. It’s easy for the customer to understand. 2. It’s aligned with the value that the customer receives in the product. 3. Grows with your customer’s usage of that value. The Mistake that So Many Make: User-Based Pricing Per-User Pricing Scratch Pad How to Find Your Value Metric Step 1: Subjective Analysis Value Metric Scratch Pad Step 2: Data-Driven Approach How to Stress Test Your Value Metrics Value Metric Scratch Pad Commonly Asked Questions Why is a value metric important? What is the difference between data and metrics? What are key growth metrics? What are the five most common pricing strategies? What are the five key performance indicators? Does your value metric grow with the customer? How do you arrive at a value-based price? What is a net promoter score? Content: Everything from this point on focuses on how to help your users experience this value metric in your product as quickly and often as possible. It can be tempting to call it quits once you’ve found a value metric that you think will work, but, given the importance of the metric, I encourage you to vet your metric with a data-driven approach. Step 2: Data-Driven Approach Every SaaS business has many types of users. You’ll have users who churn quickly, users who barely use your product, power users, and users with an extremely high lifetime value. When analyzing usage patterns, it’s easy to focus on measuring your product data without segmenting your users. By doing so, it’s easy to optimize for everyone while creating a worse experience for your best users. For instance, if we look at the product data for your best customers, we could streamline the onboarding experience for your perfect-fit customers while simultaneously filtering out bad-fit customers. We might decrease our signup-to-activation metric but increase our free-to-paid conversion rate. To get meaningful insights out of your product data, look for patterns among your best and worst customers.
https://productled.com/value-metrics/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_877566172#22_1723145665
Title: What the Heck are Value Metrics? Find Yours for Your Product Headings: What the Heck Are Value Metrics? And How To Find Yours? What the Heck Are Value Metrics? And How To Find Yours? A value metric is the way you measure value exchange in your product. What Makes a Good Value Metric? 1. It’s easy for the customer to understand. 2. It’s aligned with the value that the customer receives in the product. 3. Grows with your customer’s usage of that value. The Mistake that So Many Make: User-Based Pricing Per-User Pricing Scratch Pad How to Find Your Value Metric Step 1: Subjective Analysis Value Metric Scratch Pad Step 2: Data-Driven Approach How to Stress Test Your Value Metrics Value Metric Scratch Pad Commonly Asked Questions Why is a value metric important? What is the difference between data and metrics? What are key growth metrics? What are the five most common pricing strategies? What are the five key performance indicators? Does your value metric grow with the customer? How do you arrive at a value-based price? What is a net promoter score? Content: When analyzing usage patterns, it’s easy to focus on measuring your product data without segmenting your users. By doing so, it’s easy to optimize for everyone while creating a worse experience for your best users. For instance, if we look at the product data for your best customers, we could streamline the onboarding experience for your perfect-fit customers while simultaneously filtering out bad-fit customers. We might decrease our signup-to-activation metric but increase our free-to-paid conversion rate. To get meaningful insights out of your product data, look for patterns among your best and worst customers. For instance, ask yourself these questions when analyzing your data: What do my best customers do regularly in
https://productled.com/value-metrics/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_877707337#18_1723547391
Title: 12 Product Marketing Interview Questions and Answers Headings: 12 Product Marketing Interview Questions and Answers 12 Product Marketing Interview Questions and Answers Product Marketing Interview Questions and Answers Situation-Based Questions 1. Describe one product that you think is marketed poorly. Also, explain what you would do differently, and why. 2. How would you inform customers of new product feature launches? 3. How would you justify any price changes to old customers? 4. You believe the market is too saturated to profit with a new product. What would you do in this case? Product Marketing Role-Based Questions 5. How does your PM background look like? 6. What do you expect from this PM role? 7. What products have you previously marketed, and how? 8. What's the best way to measure the success of a product launch? 9. How do you make sure that the sales team understands how to present the product in an engaging manner? Behavior-Based Questions 10. Have you been involved in a failed product marketing campaign? If yes, what do you think went wrong, and what was your lesson from it? 11. How do you make sure you and your team members communicate effectively? 12. How do you keep up-to-date with the latest industry and market trends? Acing Product Marketing Interview Questions Josh Fechter Content: To answer this question, candidates need to be aware of the latest marketing tools. They have to be able to list down the KPIs and metrics that need tracking to assess the success of a product launch. That includes launch campaign metrics such as lead generated, page views, news coverage, and promotional channel metrics. They should also mention product adoption metrics, such as product trials, user retention, and customer usage. Furthermore, market impact metrics such as revenue, market share, and competitive win rate may seem like a given, but they need a mention. Lastly, they should also explain why qualitative internal and external feedback is important in determining product launch success. 9. How do you make sure that the sales team understands how to present the product in an engaging manner? Product marketers should understand that the marketing and sales teams need to work together. Product marketers have to help sales teams understand the product and marketing positions to make sure the right sales approach is adopted.
https://productmanagerhq.com/product-marketing-interview-questions/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_891099509#4_1751491642
Title: Showing Diversity and Inclusion on Your Resume Headings: Showing Diversity and Inclusion on Your Resume Showing Diversity and Inclusion on Your Resume Content: Have you raised funds for advocacy organizations or groups committed to serving the underserved? Are you part of a group that promotes cultural diversity and understanding? Let employers see what you’re up to outside of the office and how you support initiatives that you are passionate about. Serving on committees or doing community outreach. Many companies have committees that are dedicated to diversity and inclusion, community outreach, innovation, company culture, or recruitment. Highlight your involvement and what you have achieved (or been working on) as part of these teams. If you’re not part of any committees yet, now is a good time to make a change and become more involved. Show that you are part of the solution and are doing your part to promote diversity, equality, and inclusion in the workplace. Incorporate the work you have done and initiatives you have been part of in your resume. If you need help polishing up your resume, turn to the team at Grammar Chic.
https://professionalresumewriters.net/showing-diversity-and-inclusion-on-your-resume/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892147170#11_1753938070
Title: Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Headings: Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Method 1: Remove the last letter if it is blank manually Method 2: Remove the last letter of a cell if it is a space with formulas So if you want to use the formula, the just copy it from above and replace “B5” with you cell reference. Method 3: Remove the last space character of a cell faster and easier This function is included in our Excel Add-In 'Professor Excel Tools' Method 4: Remove all the spaces – except those between words By Henrik Schiffner Content: Download and try it for free: No sign-up, no installation (just activation within Excel) and a lot of other useful functions. This function is included in our Excel Add-In 'Professor Excel Tools' Learn more Download Free Trial (No sign-up, download starts directly) More than 35,000 users can't be wrong. Method 4: Remove all the spaces – except those between words There is another option, which is not as exact, but in most cases still possible: Use the TRIM formula. TRIM removes all the spaces except single spaces between words. It’s very easy to use: =TRIM (A1) removes all the spaces of cell A1 (as said, single space characters between words stay). Please note:
https://professor-excel.com/space-character-remove-last-letter-in-excel-if-it-is-blank/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892147170#12_1753939650
Title: Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Headings: Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Method 1: Remove the last letter if it is blank manually Method 2: Remove the last letter of a cell if it is a space with formulas So if you want to use the formula, the just copy it from above and replace “B5” with you cell reference. Method 3: Remove the last space character of a cell faster and easier This function is included in our Excel Add-In 'Professor Excel Tools' Method 4: Remove all the spaces – except those between words By Henrik Schiffner Content: Use the TRIM formula. TRIM removes all the spaces except single spaces between words. It’s very easy to use: =TRIM (A1) removes all the spaces of cell A1 (as said, single space characters between words stay). Please note: Spaces in the beginning of the cell will also be removed. Double or triple spaces (and more, of course) between words will be reduced to one single space. If that’s fine for you, the TRIM formula is a nice option. By Henrik Schiffner Henrik Schiffner is a freelance business consultant and software developer. He lives and works in Hamburg, Germany.
https://professor-excel.com/space-character-remove-last-letter-in-excel-if-it-is-blank/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892147170#13_1753941129
Title: Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Headings: Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Space Character: Remove Last Letter in Excel If It Is Blank Method 1: Remove the last letter if it is blank manually Method 2: Remove the last letter of a cell if it is a space with formulas So if you want to use the formula, the just copy it from above and replace “B5” with you cell reference. Method 3: Remove the last space character of a cell faster and easier This function is included in our Excel Add-In 'Professor Excel Tools' Method 4: Remove all the spaces – except those between words By Henrik Schiffner Content: Spaces in the beginning of the cell will also be removed. Double or triple spaces (and more, of course) between words will be reduced to one single space. If that’s fine for you, the TRIM formula is a nice option. By Henrik Schiffner Henrik Schiffner is a freelance business consultant and software developer. He lives and works in Hamburg, Germany. Besides being an Excel enthusiast he loves photography and sports. View all of Henrik Schiffner's posts. Post navigation Previous post How to Easily Export and Excel Sheet as PDF/XLSX Files: Big Guide! Next post IF Formula in Excel:
https://professor-excel.com/space-character-remove-last-letter-in-excel-if-it-is-blank/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892355637#8_1754454811
Title: Euthanasia: A Gateway To Relieve Suffering – Professor Ramos' Blog Headings: Euthanasia: A Gateway To Relieve Suffering Euthanasia: A Gateway To Relieve Suffering Content: Why don’t people hear about the topic? A study was conducted on why euthanasia is complex to legalize due to religion and also physicians who are willing to volunteer to conduct the assisted suicide. It also states how suicide should be morally accepted. “ This rested on her belief that suicide could be morally acceptable—not that it always is, but that it can be” (“Legalization of Assisted Suicide”). If a patient who is dying and suffering suicide should not be considered to be selfish nor looked down upon. No matter how hard it is to let someone go, it is best to realize that we all come and go in life. We all come to an end, but why keep someone alive when they’re on the verge of dying? Why be afraid to accept the truth when you’re only causing nothing but pain for your loved one. Euthanasia should be viewed morally because it is relieving someone of suffering. According to the article “Legalization of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia” it describes why majority of all physicians who do not volunteer to administer euthanasia or assisted suicide was based on their religion and also their code of conduct.
https://professorramos.blog/2017/08/09/euthanasia-a-gateway-to-relieve-suffering/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892355637#9_1754456369
Title: Euthanasia: A Gateway To Relieve Suffering – Professor Ramos' Blog Headings: Euthanasia: A Gateway To Relieve Suffering Euthanasia: A Gateway To Relieve Suffering Content: No matter how hard it is to let someone go, it is best to realize that we all come and go in life. We all come to an end, but why keep someone alive when they’re on the verge of dying? Why be afraid to accept the truth when you’re only causing nothing but pain for your loved one. Euthanasia should be viewed morally because it is relieving someone of suffering. According to the article “Legalization of Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia” it describes why majority of all physicians who do not volunteer to administer euthanasia or assisted suicide was based on their religion and also their code of conduct. The code of conduct that physicians make is that they make an oath to save lives and by euthanizing their patients it is breaking their code of conduct. Religion is the biggest barrier that most physicians have because they’re religion prohibits them from killing someone. If religion were to separate from work and the choices of others then euthanasia would become morally accepted. If most physicians were to separate that from a workplace environment then maybe everyone who is willing to be euthanized could end all of the pain and misery they are enduring due to doctors and close ones keeping that patient who is dying a live. In states where euthanasia is not legalized, the patients who are on the verge of dying or know that they have a small percentage of living they resort to a different type of method.
https://professorramos.blog/2017/08/09/euthanasia-a-gateway-to-relieve-suffering/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892850264#1_1755693844
Title: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records - Proficientwriters.net Headings: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records What is Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)? Example of EDI: How does using EDI facilitate electronic transactions in healthcare? Example of the Benefits of EDI: How has HIPAA changed how healthcare information is transmitted in EDI? Example of HIPPA/EDI: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records, reimbursement, HIPAA, and EDI transactions? Example of HIPPA/EDI Claim Transaction References "Is this question part of your assignment? We can help" Content: 4 Example of HIPPA/EDI: 4 What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records, reimbursement, HIPAA, and EDI transactions? 5 Example of HIPPA/EDI Claim Transaction 5 References 6 What is Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)? Electronic Data Interchange is a way to transmit data between different computer systems. EDI is the standard designated by HIPAA to exchange patient data. EDI systems effectively eliminates the need to print, file, store, post and retrieve paper documents which is more cost efficient in the doctor’s office. The goals for the future is to completely get rid of paper records. This will then have everyone working with the same systems so that all of our information is processed and read easily. This will help us provide better and quicker care for our patients. Some doctors that have been using the EDI system, often find it more difficult to use then paper, but converting to the system means that it will pay dividends in the end.
https://proficientwriters.net/what-is-the-relationship-between-electronic-health-records/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892850264#2_1755695731
Title: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records - Proficientwriters.net Headings: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records What is Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)? Example of EDI: How does using EDI facilitate electronic transactions in healthcare? Example of the Benefits of EDI: How has HIPAA changed how healthcare information is transmitted in EDI? Example of HIPPA/EDI: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records, reimbursement, HIPAA, and EDI transactions? Example of HIPPA/EDI Claim Transaction References "Is this question part of your assignment? We can help" Content: EDI systems effectively eliminates the need to print, file, store, post and retrieve paper documents which is more cost efficient in the doctor’s office. The goals for the future is to completely get rid of paper records. This will then have everyone working with the same systems so that all of our information is processed and read easily. This will help us provide better and quicker care for our patients. Some doctors that have been using the EDI system, often find it more difficult to use then paper, but converting to the system means that it will pay dividends in the end. Example of EDI: (Kavidayal, 2015) How does using EDI facilitate electronic transactions in healthcare? · Manual data entry and processing is reduced · Improved data quality · Elimination of contrasting forms and codes · Improved cash flow · Improved accuracy of information · Fewer rejections of claims · Cost savings (paper, postage, labor) · Less billing errors · Improved accuracy, reliability and usefulness of shared information · Improved patient service · Prevents errors that could lead to allegations of fraud and abuse · Minimizes the risk of penalties · Staff stress is reduced Example of the Benefits of EDI: (Admin, 2015) How has HIPAA changed how healthcare information is transmitted in EDI? First let’s explain HIPPA.
https://proficientwriters.net/what-is-the-relationship-between-electronic-health-records/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_892850264#3_1755698051
Title: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records - Proficientwriters.net Headings: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records What is Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)? Example of EDI: How does using EDI facilitate electronic transactions in healthcare? Example of the Benefits of EDI: How has HIPAA changed how healthcare information is transmitted in EDI? Example of HIPPA/EDI: What is the relationship between Electronic Health Records, reimbursement, HIPAA, and EDI transactions? Example of HIPPA/EDI Claim Transaction References "Is this question part of your assignment? We can help" Content: Example of EDI: (Kavidayal, 2015) How does using EDI facilitate electronic transactions in healthcare? · Manual data entry and processing is reduced · Improved data quality · Elimination of contrasting forms and codes · Improved cash flow · Improved accuracy of information · Fewer rejections of claims · Cost savings (paper, postage, labor) · Less billing errors · Improved accuracy, reliability and usefulness of shared information · Improved patient service · Prevents errors that could lead to allegations of fraud and abuse · Minimizes the risk of penalties · Staff stress is reduced Example of the Benefits of EDI: (Admin, 2015) How has HIPAA changed how healthcare information is transmitted in EDI? First let’s explain HIPPA. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPPA) was enacted in 1996. An important feature of HIPAA is the national standards for electronic health care transactions. These standards are meant to improve the efficiency of the healthcare system in the U.S. By doing this we are boosting the widespread use of the EDI system here in the U.S. “Standards for Electronic Transactions (EDI) and Code Sets The HIPAA transactions standards clearly set forth a special role for healthcare clearinghouses to provide services to translate electronic data that is not in the HIPAA-dictated format into standardized data that complies with the HIPAA-dictated formats (referred to as the X12 format). National Information Services (NIS) has provided customers with this “translation” service as part of our electronic claims service before the compliance date of October 16, 2002. Stringent testing and evaluation of electronic claims transmissions by Claredi resulted in full certification that all claims transactions and protocols were compliant with all electronic transaction and code set requirements mandated by HIPAA” (HIPPA, 2009).
https://proficientwriters.net/what-is-the-relationship-between-electronic-health-records/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895669879#1_1760744515
Title: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? Headings: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress? How Financial Stress Can Affect your Life Here are some of the effects of financial stress: How to Deal with Financial Stress Identify the Triggers Mange Your Expenses Save as Much as You Can Get Help from a Professional Seek Medical Help Look Forward Content: It’s important to understand what finance related stress is and how to deal with it. This article will help you understand what financial stress is, how it affects your life and how to effectively deal with stress. What is Financial Stress? Financial stress happens due to financial problems. A person may feel pressure, inadequate, or unhappy due to financial difficulties. These difficulties may arise from huge debt, needing money for important things like medical expenses, low income, no job, fear of bankruptcy and others. These situations can create stress and affect the health of a person. Financial stress shouldn’t be taken lightly. Not dealing with it right way can lead to serious problems like suicidal thoughts. How Financial Stress Can Affect your Life Financial stress can build over a time and become a huge problem for any person.
https://profinanceblog.com/what-is-financial-stress-and-how-to-deal-with-it.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895669879#2_1760746042
Title: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? Headings: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress? How Financial Stress Can Affect your Life Here are some of the effects of financial stress: How to Deal with Financial Stress Identify the Triggers Mange Your Expenses Save as Much as You Can Get Help from a Professional Seek Medical Help Look Forward Content: These difficulties may arise from huge debt, needing money for important things like medical expenses, low income, no job, fear of bankruptcy and others. These situations can create stress and affect the health of a person. Financial stress shouldn’t be taken lightly. Not dealing with it right way can lead to serious problems like suicidal thoughts. How Financial Stress Can Affect your Life Financial stress can build over a time and become a huge problem for any person. Without you realizing, you could be falling deep into depression. The stress due to financial problems can lead to a wide range of health problems and affect your day to day life. Some of the symptoms of financial stress may include difficulty sleeping, Feelings of isolation, anxiety, guilt, and denial. Here are some of the effects of financial stress: Negative thoughts can seep into your mind and constantly give you headaches.
https://profinanceblog.com/what-is-financial-stress-and-how-to-deal-with-it.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895669879#3_1760747621
Title: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? Headings: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress? How Financial Stress Can Affect your Life Here are some of the effects of financial stress: How to Deal with Financial Stress Identify the Triggers Mange Your Expenses Save as Much as You Can Get Help from a Professional Seek Medical Help Look Forward Content: Without you realizing, you could be falling deep into depression. The stress due to financial problems can lead to a wide range of health problems and affect your day to day life. Some of the symptoms of financial stress may include difficulty sleeping, Feelings of isolation, anxiety, guilt, and denial. Here are some of the effects of financial stress: Negative thoughts can seep into your mind and constantly give you headaches. This can lead to things like self-harming. Feeling of regret and failure is the common symptoms of financial stress. You may think that you have let many people down with your disastrous financial decisions. Change in your behavior with your family and friends can be apparent. People with difficult financial situations dealing with stress will often avoid social occasions.
https://profinanceblog.com/what-is-financial-stress-and-how-to-deal-with-it.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895669879#4_1760749096
Title: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? Headings: What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress and How to Deal With It? What is Financial Stress? How Financial Stress Can Affect your Life Here are some of the effects of financial stress: How to Deal with Financial Stress Identify the Triggers Mange Your Expenses Save as Much as You Can Get Help from a Professional Seek Medical Help Look Forward Content: This can lead to things like self-harming. Feeling of regret and failure is the common symptoms of financial stress. You may think that you have let many people down with your disastrous financial decisions. Change in your behavior with your family and friends can be apparent. People with difficult financial situations dealing with stress will often avoid social occasions. Slowly the person may be withdrawing into themselves and avoiding talking. Building bad habits like drinking excessively could be another bad effect of financial stress. How to Deal with Financial Stress Dealing with your financial stress is essential for a healthy life. There are many reasons for financial difficulties. Rising debt is one of the major ones.
https://profinanceblog.com/what-is-financial-stress-and-how-to-deal-with-it.html
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895881105#6_1761070967
Title: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? - ProfiTrust Headings: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs? Who Pays a Tariff, and Who Gets the Money? Why Do Countries Impose Tariffs? What Are Some Different Types of Tariff? What Is the Difference Between a Tariff and a Tax? What are the Risks of Tariffs? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? How Do Tariffs Affect Retailers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in New Industries? Tariffs can benefit some domestic companies operating in new industries. How Do Tariffs Affect Consumers? Tariffs can benefit domestic consumers (long term) How Do Tariffs Affect Workers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in Strategic Industries How Are Tariffs Affected By Politics? What are Protective Tariffs? Are the US and China in a Trade War? Is the US in a Trade War with Any Other Countries? Leave a Replay Content: Failure to pay a tariff can result in penalties or legal action. There are indirect costs for other parties too. For example, an importer might pass the cost of tariffs onto their suppliers by only agreeing to pay a lower rate for the goods. The cost of tariffs can also be passed onto consumers or other businesses if the importer charges a higher price for the goods. Why Do Countries Impose Tariffs? Tariffs primarily exist to make imported goods less attractive. If the price of imported goods rises, buying or selling domestically-produced goods might be a more attractive option. They might also serve to keep certain products out of the country altogether. There are many reasons a government may wish to discourage imports: In an attempt to decrease unemployment To raise revenues for the state To ensure strategically important industries can survive What Are Some Different Types of Tariff?
https://profit-trust.com/blog/what-are-tariffs/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895881105#10_1761079730
Title: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? - ProfiTrust Headings: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs? Who Pays a Tariff, and Who Gets the Money? Why Do Countries Impose Tariffs? What Are Some Different Types of Tariff? What Is the Difference Between a Tariff and a Tax? What are the Risks of Tariffs? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? How Do Tariffs Affect Retailers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in New Industries? Tariffs can benefit some domestic companies operating in new industries. How Do Tariffs Affect Consumers? Tariffs can benefit domestic consumers (long term) How Do Tariffs Affect Workers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in Strategic Industries How Are Tariffs Affected By Politics? What are Protective Tariffs? Are the US and China in a Trade War? Is the US in a Trade War with Any Other Countries? Leave a Replay Content: Tariffs are sometimes described as a tax. They represent an involuntary charge levied by governments. So in this sense, tariffs are a type of tax. What are the Risks of Tariffs? There are several risks involved when a government imposes tariffs: Tariffs can harm businesses that import goods. Tariffs can cause diplomatic issues with other countries. Other countries can impose retaliatory tariffs, which hurt exporters. Generally, economists broadly disapprove of tariffs. In 2018, a forum of ten economists unanimously agreed that the new aluminum and steel tariffs imposed by the US would not improve the country’s overall welfare.
https://profit-trust.com/blog/what-are-tariffs/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895881105#11_1761081630
Title: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? - ProfiTrust Headings: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs? Who Pays a Tariff, and Who Gets the Money? Why Do Countries Impose Tariffs? What Are Some Different Types of Tariff? What Is the Difference Between a Tariff and a Tax? What are the Risks of Tariffs? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? How Do Tariffs Affect Retailers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in New Industries? Tariffs can benefit some domestic companies operating in new industries. How Do Tariffs Affect Consumers? Tariffs can benefit domestic consumers (long term) How Do Tariffs Affect Workers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in Strategic Industries How Are Tariffs Affected By Politics? What are Protective Tariffs? Are the US and China in a Trade War? Is the US in a Trade War with Any Other Countries? Leave a Replay Content: Tariffs can harm businesses that import goods. Tariffs can cause diplomatic issues with other countries. Other countries can impose retaliatory tariffs, which hurt exporters. Generally, economists broadly disapprove of tariffs. In 2018, a forum of ten economists unanimously agreed that the new aluminum and steel tariffs imposed by the US would not improve the country’s overall welfare. How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? Tariffs have different effects on different types of businesses and people. Here are some ways that tariffs affect different types of businesses and people, from the perspective of the country imposing import tariffs. How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses.
https://profit-trust.com/blog/what-are-tariffs/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895881105#12_1761083611
Title: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? - ProfiTrust Headings: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs? Who Pays a Tariff, and Who Gets the Money? Why Do Countries Impose Tariffs? What Are Some Different Types of Tariff? What Is the Difference Between a Tariff and a Tax? What are the Risks of Tariffs? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? How Do Tariffs Affect Retailers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in New Industries? Tariffs can benefit some domestic companies operating in new industries. How Do Tariffs Affect Consumers? Tariffs can benefit domestic consumers (long term) How Do Tariffs Affect Workers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in Strategic Industries How Are Tariffs Affected By Politics? What are Protective Tariffs? Are the US and China in a Trade War? Is the US in a Trade War with Any Other Countries? Leave a Replay Content: How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? Tariffs have different effects on different types of businesses and people. Here are some ways that tariffs affect different types of businesses and people, from the perspective of the country imposing import tariffs. How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses. When tariffs go up, this can often be more damaging to small businesses than large ones, because: Small businesses have smaller margins and are less able to absorb additional costs Small businesses have less leverage with suppliers and are less able to force them to reduce their prices to compensate for tariffs Small businesses have fewer resources to dedicate to finding new suppliers However, just as certain large businesses will benefit from the imposition of tariffs, some small businesses will benefit from tariffs too. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? Tariffs can benefit domestic manufacturers. Tariffs raise prices on imported goods.
https://profit-trust.com/blog/what-are-tariffs/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895881105#13_1761085850
Title: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? - ProfiTrust Headings: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs? Who Pays a Tariff, and Who Gets the Money? Why Do Countries Impose Tariffs? What Are Some Different Types of Tariff? What Is the Difference Between a Tariff and a Tax? What are the Risks of Tariffs? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? How Do Tariffs Affect Retailers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in New Industries? Tariffs can benefit some domestic companies operating in new industries. How Do Tariffs Affect Consumers? Tariffs can benefit domestic consumers (long term) How Do Tariffs Affect Workers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in Strategic Industries How Are Tariffs Affected By Politics? What are Protective Tariffs? Are the US and China in a Trade War? Is the US in a Trade War with Any Other Countries? Leave a Replay Content: When tariffs go up, this can often be more damaging to small businesses than large ones, because: Small businesses have smaller margins and are less able to absorb additional costs Small businesses have less leverage with suppliers and are less able to force them to reduce their prices to compensate for tariffs Small businesses have fewer resources to dedicate to finding new suppliers However, just as certain large businesses will benefit from the imposition of tariffs, some small businesses will benefit from tariffs too. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? Tariffs can benefit domestic manufacturers. Tariffs raise prices on imported goods. Domestic manufacturers can gain a comparative advantage from this. Let’s say a US clothing manufacturer makes jeans at a cost price of $10 per pair, and a Chinese clothing manufacturer makes jeans at a cost price of $8.50 per pair. A US clothing retailer is incentivized to purchase jeans from the Chinese company, even with a 10 percent tariff that raises the price to $9.35. Raise tariffs on imported clothing to 25 percent, and suddenly the Chinese jeans cost $10.63. The US clothing retailer is thus incentivized to purchase jeans from the US clothing manufacturer.
https://profit-trust.com/blog/what-are-tariffs/
msmarco_v2.1_doc_26_895881105#14_1761088337
Title: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? - ProfiTrust Headings: What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs and How Do They Affect Your Business? What Are Tariffs? Who Pays a Tariff, and Who Gets the Money? Why Do Countries Impose Tariffs? What Are Some Different Types of Tariff? What Is the Difference Between a Tariff and a Tax? What are the Risks of Tariffs? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses? How Do Tariffs Affect Small Businesses? Tariffs can hurt small businesses. How do Tariffs Affect Manufacturers? How Do Tariffs Affect Retailers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in New Industries? Tariffs can benefit some domestic companies operating in new industries. How Do Tariffs Affect Consumers? Tariffs can benefit domestic consumers (long term) How Do Tariffs Affect Workers? How Do Tariffs Affect Businesses in Strategic Industries How Are Tariffs Affected By Politics? What are Protective Tariffs? Are the US and China in a Trade War? Is the US in a Trade War with Any Other Countries? Leave a Replay Content: Domestic manufacturers can gain a comparative advantage from this. Let’s say a US clothing manufacturer makes jeans at a cost price of $10 per pair, and a Chinese clothing manufacturer makes jeans at a cost price of $8.50 per pair. A US clothing retailer is incentivized to purchase jeans from the Chinese company, even with a 10 percent tariff that raises the price to $9.35. Raise tariffs on imported clothing to 25 percent, and suddenly the Chinese jeans cost $10.63. The US clothing retailer is thus incentivized to purchase jeans from the US clothing manufacturer. Tariffs can hurt domestic manufacturers who source materials from abroad. Manufacturers sometimes need to source parts and materials from abroad. If a domestic manufacturer finds a cheap overseas supplier for a particular component, this can significantly reduce its production costs. Put a tariff on imports of this component, and production costs will rise. In some situations, this could result in domestic manufacturers being unable to compete with foreign manufacturers.
https://profit-trust.com/blog/what-are-tariffs/