Production of precious metals, sugar, rubber, grains, coffee, copper, and <span>oil.
Hope this helps!</span>
Answer:
Africans, Indians, Europeans, Chinese
Explanation:
i looked it up
Answer:
Select specific target markets.
Explanation:
Management will investigate the capability of the organization in the last stage or fifth stage of the target market selection process, which is the "select specific target markets". In this stage, there are certain issues that must be resolved and they are;
1. Are there differences in the needs of customers valid to warrant using market segmentation?
2. Which segment should the organization participate?
3. And lastly, are the resources and skills needed to effectively compete in the target market available to the organization at the moment?
Answer:
0.965 hour
Explanation:
1 frame of video = 480×320 pixels = 480×320×2 bytes = 307,200 bytes
In 1 sec (1/3600 hour) 30 frames of video are displayed which will occupy 30×307,200 bytes = 9,216,000 bytes
Number of hours of video that will fit in a 32 gigabyte (32×10^9 byte) memory = (32×10^9)/(9,216,000×3600) = 0.965 hour
Answer:
Explanation:
Issue: Can an institution of higher learning use race as a factor when making admissions decisions?
Result: The Court held that universities may use race as part of an admissions process so long as "fixed quotas" are not used. The Court determined that the specific system in place at the University of California Medical School was "unnecessary" to achieve the goal of creating a diverse student body and was merely a "fixed quota" and therefore, was unconstitutional.
Importance: The decision started a line of cases in which the Court upheld affirmative action programs. In 2003, such academic affirmative action programs were again directly challenged in Gratz v. Bollinger and Grutter v. Bollinger. In these cases, the Court clarified that admission programs that include race as a factor can pass constitutional muster so long as the policy is narrowly tailored and does not create an automatic preference based on race. The Court asserted that a system that created an automatic race-based preference would in fact violate the Equal Protection Clause.