here are some ideas
some things i wished i knew before coming into middle school:
1. be organized
2. dont worry about other peoples opinions
3. DO YOUR HOMEWORK
things you learned so far:
1. a lot of things...
2. take notes
3.people change
advice:
if you stress too much, it gets hard.
its okay to get a bad grade on an assignment every once and a while.
be flexable with the people around you
TAKE DEEP BREATHS
DONT TALK DURING CLASS
going into the next grade:
i would change my dynamics and sleeping habits
so there are some ideas that i hope will help!!!
Either options C or D
You can change the chart type of the whole chart or for single data series in most 2-D charts to give the chart a different look. In 3D or bubble charts, you can only change the chart type of the whole chart. By following the steps in the answers above, you will be in a position to select available chart type like column chart or line chart.
Highlight everything with your curser.
Answer:
Explanation:
The relationship between the World Wide Web and the Internet is that the Internet is a collection of connected computers through gateways by which the information that is stored in databases and on servers is transferred from one computer to another and the World Wide Web is the software that is used to retrieve the information requested by the users. The World Wide Web (which we call the Web because we’re lazy typists) lives “on top of” the Internet. The Internet’s network is at the core of the Web, and the Web is like an attractive parasite that requires the Net for survival (dummies.com, 2010). The Web page that are accessible on the web usually contain hypertext links and are sometimes called links. These links connect to other pages that are store on the same or even a different server; these servers can be in any location throughout the World. This system of interlinked documents is known as hypertext (Dummies.com, 2010).
Links can create connections that let you go directly to related information. These invisible connections between pages are like the threads of a spider web — as you click from Web page to Web page, you can envision the Web created by the links. What’s so remarkable about the Web is that it connects pieces of information from all around the planet, on different computers and in different databases (Dummies.com, 2010). Every Web page has a name attached to it so that browsers, and you, can find it. The name of this naming convention: URL, or Uniform Resource Locator. Every Web page has a URL, a series of characters that begins with http://. (Pronounce each letter, “U-R-L” — no one says “earl.”), (Dummies.com, 2010). The Internet is a world wide network of computers that are connected (networked) and are using the communication method called TCP/IP. The Internet was named ARPANET in 1969 by the Advanced Research Projects Agency of the U.S. Department of Defence with just four computers connected together (Comentum.com, 2010). The Internet, sometimes called simply “the Net,” is a worldwide system of computer networks – a network of networks in which users at any one computer can, if they have permission, get information from any other computer (SearchWinDevelopment.com, 2010). Computers are connected to the Internet via modems and gateways. Some computers are used as servers which are continuously connected to the Internet and used to store web pages; these computers are usually referred to as servers. A house hold computer is primarily used by ordinary people to search for information on the web is usually known as a client. The request for information or search result is passed by the browser on the client to the server that contains the pages which have the relevant information in them via the net. The request passes through the modem then along the net to the correct server, the server then serves up the correct page, which is then sent back to client computer and presented to the user through the browser.
Answer: A flowchart is a graphical representation of decisions and their results mapped out in individual shapes.
Explanation:
These shapes were first developed by Herman Goldstine and John von Neumann in the 1940s.
Flowcharts can provide a step-by-step diagram for mapping out complex situations, such as programming code or troubleshooting problems with a computer.