The document discusses how to build products that can pivot quickly by adopting principles of business agility. It recommends establishing a virtuous cycle of formulating testable hypotheses, quickly delivering and releasing changes, and measuring results to repeat the process. It also suggests techniques like focusing on pragmatic software quality, evolutionary architecture, continuous delivery, and properly organizing IT to achieve business agility through architectural adaptability, keeping systems poised for change, lowering experimentation risk, and maximizing visibility and feedback.
Barbara Abell has had a successful career teaching world languages virtually for the past 10 years. She began by developing and teaching French and Spanish courses for Georgia Virtual School, for which she won Teacher of the Year awards. Since then, she has taught middle and high school French, Spanish, and ELL courses, as well as elementary Spanish and ELL. She has also developed various language courses and served in a coordinating role for charter schools across several states and countries. The most rewarding part of her work has been helping students succeed in learning new languages and experiencing the cognitive benefits of language learning.
This document discusses how to build lean products that can pivot quickly by establishing a virtuous cycle of formulating testable hypotheses, quickly delivering and releasing software, and measuring results to inform further iterations. It emphasizes the need to change quickly and safely while maintaining visibility, experiment often to gather evidence rather than rely on guesses, and balance predictability with opportunities. Techniques for achieving this include focusing on pragmatic software quality, evolutionary architecture, continuous delivery, and properly organizing the IT organization to both control costs through stability and generate value through responsiveness. The goal is to achieve business agility through architecting for real adaptability, keeping systems poised for change, lowering risks of experimentation, and maximizing visibility and feedback while aligning the organization
Caffeine acts as an antagonist to adenosine in the brain by blocking its inhibitory effects on nerve responses, increasing alertness. Cocaine binds to dopamine transport proteins, preventing dopamine reabsorption and leading to a buildup in the synaptic cleft and prolonged stimulation of postsynaptic neurons, causing a high in users. Both caffeine and cocaine act in the brain to alter neurotransmitter activity and increase alertness or induce euphoric effects through similar mechanisms.
Sumber daya alam pertambangan memberikan manfaat besar bagi kehidupan manusia, seperti bahan bakar untuk transportasi, industri, rumah tangga, serta bahan baku untuk berbagai barang seperti perhiasan, bangunan, alat rumah tangga, dan obat-obatan. Pertambangan dikelompokkan menjadi tiga golongan berdasarkan nilainya, yaitu strategis, vital, dan kurang penting.
Building a solid foundation to support your customer journeyIDEQA
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This document outlines an 8-step framework for building a strong foundation to support a company's customer experience journey. The 8 steps are: 1) Establish a knowledge foundation about customers and products, 2) Empower customers through self-service, 3) Empower frontline employees, 4) Offer multi-channel support, 5) Listen to customer feedback, 6) Design seamless experiences, 7) Engage customers proactively, and 8) Continuously measure and improve the customer experience. The framework is intended to provide a useful mechanism for companies to evaluate their progress in improving the customer journey.
This document provides definitions and methods for investigating populations in biology. It defines key terms like ecosystem, population, community and habitat. It describes how to use quadrats and transects to sample populations through random and systematic sampling. Methods covered include measuring abundance through frequency and percentage cover, and using mark-release-recapture to determine population size. Population growth curves and factors influencing population sizes like temperature, light, pH, water and humidity are also summarized.
Unit 2 – Section 1 discusses variation and sampling. It explains that sampling involves taking measurements from individuals in a population to represent the whole population, but bias or chance may make the sample unrepresentative. Random sampling using a grid and coordinates can prevent bias. Increasing sample size and using statistical tests improves reliability and determines if variation is due to chance.
Section 2 describes DNA structure. Nucleotides contain sugar, phosphate, and a base that pairs with another base through hydrogen bonding to form the DNA double helix. Genes are sections of DNA that code for proteins. The triplet code means every 3 bases codes for an amino acid. Chromosomes contain DNA and package it for cell division.
The document discusses how heart rate is controlled by the nervous system via two centres in the brain - one that increases heart rate via the sympathetic nervous system, and one that decreases it via the parasympathetic nervous system. These centres are stimulated by two types of receptors: chemoreceptors that detect chemical changes in the blood, and baroreceptors that detect pressure changes. Chemoreceptors stimulate the centre that increases heart rate when carbon dioxide levels rise, increasing heart rate to remove carbon dioxide faster. Baroreceptors stimulate the centre that decreases heart rate when blood pressure is high, and the centre that increases it when pressure is low.
Sumber daya alam pertambangan memberikan manfaat besar bagi kehidupan manusia, seperti bahan bakar untuk transportasi, industri, rumah tangga, serta bahan baku untuk berbagai barang seperti perhiasan, bangunan, alat rumah tangga, dan obat-obatan. Pertambangan dikelompokkan menjadi tiga golongan berdasarkan nilainya, yaitu strategis, vital, dan kurang penting.
Building a solid foundation to support your customer journeyIDEQA
Ìý
This document outlines an 8-step framework for building a strong foundation to support a company's customer experience journey. The 8 steps are: 1) Establish a knowledge foundation about customers and products, 2) Empower customers through self-service, 3) Empower frontline employees, 4) Offer multi-channel support, 5) Listen to customer feedback, 6) Design seamless experiences, 7) Engage customers proactively, and 8) Continuously measure and improve the customer experience. The framework is intended to provide a useful mechanism for companies to evaluate their progress in improving the customer journey.
This document provides definitions and methods for investigating populations in biology. It defines key terms like ecosystem, population, community and habitat. It describes how to use quadrats and transects to sample populations through random and systematic sampling. Methods covered include measuring abundance through frequency and percentage cover, and using mark-release-recapture to determine population size. Population growth curves and factors influencing population sizes like temperature, light, pH, water and humidity are also summarized.
Unit 2 – Section 1 discusses variation and sampling. It explains that sampling involves taking measurements from individuals in a population to represent the whole population, but bias or chance may make the sample unrepresentative. Random sampling using a grid and coordinates can prevent bias. Increasing sample size and using statistical tests improves reliability and determines if variation is due to chance.
Section 2 describes DNA structure. Nucleotides contain sugar, phosphate, and a base that pairs with another base through hydrogen bonding to form the DNA double helix. Genes are sections of DNA that code for proteins. The triplet code means every 3 bases codes for an amino acid. Chromosomes contain DNA and package it for cell division.
The document discusses how heart rate is controlled by the nervous system via two centres in the brain - one that increases heart rate via the sympathetic nervous system, and one that decreases it via the parasympathetic nervous system. These centres are stimulated by two types of receptors: chemoreceptors that detect chemical changes in the blood, and baroreceptors that detect pressure changes. Chemoreceptors stimulate the centre that increases heart rate when carbon dioxide levels rise, increasing heart rate to remove carbon dioxide faster. Baroreceptors stimulate the centre that decreases heart rate when blood pressure is high, and the centre that increases it when pressure is low.