NOT appropriate to use for affirmations in Full Verbatim are :
d) Mm
e) Ammm
f) Aha
Explanation:
- In verbatim transcription, interviews are transcribed word for word, and sound for sound. Every um, uh, laugh, and sound must be recorded for posterity.
These are the preferred spellings of typical utterances:
-
Affirmative: uh-huh, mm-hmm, yeah.
- Don't use: um-hum, um-hmm, uh-hum
- Full verbatim refers to a transcript that includes absolutely everything that is said, exactly how the speakers say it. This means we include all ums, uhs, grammatical and vocabulary mistakes, false starts and repetitions - everything.
- Verbatim is defined as an exact repetition without changing the words. An example of verbatim is when you quote someone exactly without changing anything.
I believe it’s the first answer
“They can be used in multiple places “
But I’m not sure!!
Answer:
802.11a
Explanation:
802.11a supports bandwidth of 54 Mbps in a regulated frequency spectrum of 5 GHz. 802.11a also referred to as Wi-fi 2. 802.11a is basically costs higher than 802.11b though both were created at the same time. Hence 802.11b is more popular than 802.11a . All of them are developed by IEEE.
Answer:
hardware-initiated reset
Explanation:
Once in protected mode, the 80286 is designed to remain there until it is reset by hardware.
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External hardware can be designed so that software can cause such a reset. In the 1984 PC/AT, such hardware combined with code in the BIOS allowed real mode re-entry and returned execution control to the program that caused the reset.