1. What does the author of Tracking is an Assault on Liberty accomplish by opening with a discussion of the "tradeoff" (par. 3) between privacy and personalization?
22 points for anyone to guess my favourite animal! It is a mammal, it is a dog breed, and the closest dog breed to a wolf! It is also used as a sledding dog! Good luck! :)
Javier trained for his first marathon for months. He learned to pace himself and to push through the pain. He developed blisters and shin splints. It broke his heart not to finish. Which revision below most effectively uses transitions to create coherence? Javier trained for his first marathon for months after he learned to pace himself and to push through the pain. Additionally, he developed blisters and shin splints. In the end, it broke his heart not to finish. Javier trained for his first marathon for months. He learned to pace himself and to push through the pain. Also, he developed blisters and shin splints. Similarly, it broke his heart not to finish. Javier trained for his first marathon for months. He learned to pace himself and to push through the pain. But during the race, he developed blisters and shin splints. Because of that he had to stop, and it broke his heart when he couldn’t finish. Javier trained for his first marathon for months. First, he learned to pace himself and to push through the pain. Next, he developed blisters and shin splints. Finally, it broke his heart not to finish.
Who is the protagonist and who is the antagonist explain in the story called It’s The Great Pumpkin Charlie Brown.
Read the following essay, which lacks a conclusion: Most people are very bad at understanding probability, which is the chance of something happening, or of one event being related to another. That's why so many of us are more scared of flying than of driving or think vaccines cause autism. When "the odds" involve many possibilities, our hunches about how the world is supposed to work are generally wrong. If you've taken a statistics class, your teacher has probably proved this to you with The Birthday Problem. If you are in a class of twenty-five people, what do you think the chances are that two of them have the same birthday? Most of us would guess it there's a really small probability, but actually, there's a greater than 50:50 chance. We think the odds are low because on our own, we rarely meet someone with our birthday. We don't consider that each of twenty-five people all checking with each of the other twenty-four people makes the coincidence of at least one shared birthday many times more likely.Which of the options below is the most effective conclusion to the essay?O In one of the Star Wars movies, Han Solo snaps, "Never tell me the odds!" This line is usually thought to mean that you shouldn't give up even if it seems your chances are small. But maybe it only goes to show that Commander Solo should have taken more math classes.O Statistics are often used to convince people that something that feels right or matches their instincts is true. But as the Birthday Problem shows, the probability of something happening is frequently not what we imagine it to be. Events and coincidences are often much more likely to occur than we expect.O The point is, most people don't understand that probability isn't just what happens to you but what happens to everyone. The Birthday Problem proves that few people understand the odds. In conclusion, think about that the next time you buy a lottery ticket.O Let's do the math. If there are twenty-four people in the room with you, you have twenty-four chances to find someone who shares your birthday. Not likely. But if everyone else checks dates with the other twenty-four people, that is three hundred chances for a match! Pretty likely.
PLEASE HELP Choose one character from The Call of the Wild and explain how the author created him or her. Share at least three elements of characterization and give examples of each for your chosen character. Your response should address each part of the question. Use details from the book to support each description.
from the story "I Go Along” Does gene have more potential than he believed he does? Why or why not? Use the word potential in you response. please help
help, i do NOT know this one, please help: What happened to the people who did not make it back alive? (Call of the Klondike: A True Gold Rush Adventure assignment) good luck on this.
Choose one of the scenarios below, and write three complete paragraphs answering the questions that follow. (30 points) Reminder: For this exercise, you are required to write complete analytic paragraphs. Each paragraph must have a thesis, evidence and logic that support the thesis, and a concluding statement. Scenario A: Last year, the owner of a new restaurant in California had trouble getting customers to comply with the state's smoking ban. The fine for a first violation is $100. A second violation carries a fine of $200, and third and subsequent violations cost $500 each. After a third violation within one year, a representative of California's Occupational Safety and Health Administration is required to investigate complaints. Employers may be cited with fines up to $7,000 for violations classified as general or serious and fines up to $70,000 for violations classified as willfully serious. In the ban's first year in operation, the bar owner had four violations, plus a violation for a serious offense that may or may not have been willful. 1. What are the minimum and maximum amounts that the owner had to pay in fines? 2. What effect do these fines have on businesses and consumers? 3. How do these government actions protect consumers?
"The dangerous game" Which sentence from the text best supports the answer to Question 5? Answer choices for the above question A. “There was a chance that his cries could be heard by someone aboard the yacht, but that chance was slender and grew more slender as the yacht raced on.” B. “‘They indicate a channel,’ he said, ‘where there’s none; giant rocks with razor edges crouch like a sea monster with wide-open jaws.’” C. “‘It is a very great pleasure and honor to welcome Mr. Sanger Rainsford, the celebrated hunter, to my home.’” D. “‘You are much younger than I am, Mr. Rainsford, and have not hunted as much, but you perhaps can guess the answer.’”