Answer:
Boot partition and system partition
Explanation:
System partition is the primary partition that is used as the active boot partition,it saves boot files and all files that will be used. System partition is also known as the system directory or root directory and is usually given the identifier "c"
Boot partition is the disk partition that holds the files for the operating system files Windows operating system (either XP, Vista, 7, 8, 8.1 or 10), it works with the system partition and tells the computer where to look when starting. It given the identifier of letter "D" or "E"
Answer:
d. Mainframes came before minicomputers, which led to the development of microcomputers.
Explanation:
The first <em>mainframe</em> was introduced in 1951: The UNIVAC (UNIVersal Automatic Computer I): large computer systems, for general purpose, with hundreds of users (separated from the computer) and fast computations, typically deployed by large business, industry, and government organizations.
The <em>minicomputers</em> are another class of computers that start to evolve since the late of the 1950s and the beginning of 1960s (like LINC, PDP-1, among many others), and focused on to have a more direct contact with the user or programmer, and because of this, it is said that minicomputers were the first 'personal' computers. They were cheaper than mainframes and with less memory capacity.
Finally, the <em>microcomputers</em> appeared around the beginning of 1970s (Micral), and sometime later (Altair 8800, Apple II) and were firstly used by hobbyists and computers enthusiasts. The term microcomputers have been supplanted nowadays by 'personal computers'.
Answer:
Business intelligence.
Explanation:
That concept that applies to that of the selection, incorporation, evaluation, and analysis of companies or business information systems, software, and behaviors. It is direct at promoting good business decision-making.
This is a wide concept of software and technology to capture, store, analyze, and to provide information access to support users make far better strategic decisions.
The answer is ..........
<span>Fair use </span>
The doctrine of fair use allows the limited use of copyrighted material for
certain educational, scholarly and research purposes without the permission of
the copyright owner. It applies to any copyrighted material regardless of
source, including the Internet. If you photocopy a page from one of your
textbooks or print a page from a copyrighted Internet site for certain
educational, scholarly or research purposes, your actions may fall under the
doctrine of fair use. The copyright laws give you permission to copy the work<span>
(with certain limitations), even though the owner of the copyright did not.
V.S
</span>Plagiarism
Plagiarism is "the representation of another's work or ideas as one's own; it includes the unacknowledged word-for-word use and/or paraphrasing of another<span> person's work, and/or the inappropriate unacknowledged use of another person's </span><span>ideas" (The Ohio State University Code of Student Conduct). This means that if </span><span>you use another person's work when completing any academic assignment,</span><span> </span><span>regardless
</span>