Even when using Microsoft Access and IIS, we should still use a basic Web home page named ________
Fill in the blank(s) with correct word
index.html
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Lot tolerance proportion defective (LTPD) can be defined as the:
A) quality level desired by the consumer. B) worst quality level the consumer can tolerate. C) probability of rejecting a good lot (i.e., when a lot is, in fact, acceptable to the consumer). D) probability of accepting a bad lot (i.e., when a lot is, in fact, not acceptable to the consumer).
Ken, a construction worker, broke his leg in three places when he fell to the ground from the second story of a home he was helping to build. While he was recovering from his accident, worker's compensation medical benefits covered all of the following except: ? A) all of the fees connected with his surgery
B) physical therapy. C) a maid to clean his home while he was recuperating. D) the rental of a hospital-style bed for his home.
Which of the following is not needed to establish the tort of intentional misrepresentation:
a. scienter or intent to defraud. b. intent to induce reliance. c. justifiable reliance by the plaintiff on the misrepresentation. d. use of force by defendant. e. all of the other choices are necessary elements to show the tort existed.
Ethical Conduct. Richard Fraser was an "exclusive career insurance agent" under a contract with Nationwide Mutual Insurance Co Fraser leased computer hardware and software from Nationwide for his business. During a dispute between Nationwide and the
Nationwide Insurance Independent Contractors Association, an organization representing Fraser and other exclusive career agents, Fraser prepared a letter to Nationwide's competitors asking whether they were interested in acquiring the represented agents' policyholders. Nationwide obtained a copy of the letter and searched its electronic file server for e-mail indicating that the letter had been sent. It found a stored e-mail that Fraser had sent to a co-worker indicating that the letter had been sent to at least one competitor. The e-mail was retrieved from the co-worker's file of already received and discarded messages stored on the server. When Nationwide canceled its contract with Fraser, he filed a suit in a federal district court against the firm, alleging, among other things, violations of various federal laws that prohibit the interception of electronic communications during transmission. In whose favor should the court rule, and why? Did Nationwide act ethically in retrieving the e-mail? Explain.