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Elodia [21]
3 years ago
15

1. Technician A says an automotive computer can scan its input and output circuits to detect incorrect voltage problems. Technic

ian B says an automotive computer can scan its input and output circuits to detect an incorrect resistance problem. Who is right? (A) A only. (B) B only. (C) Both A and B. (D) Neither A nor B.
Engineering
1 answer:
Marta_Voda [28]3 years ago
4 0
B is the correct answer
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The statement that is NOT true about the difference between laminar and turbulent boundary layers is:1.the Reynolds number for a
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4. The velocity gradient at the wall is greater for a laminar boundary layer than a turbulent boundary layer.

Explanation:

This is false

6 0
4 years ago
Chemical materials that are transported are called..
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Transport Molecules

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I believe the answer is transport molecules because development of a cell membrane that could allow some materials to pass.

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The y component of velocity in a steady, incompressible flow field in the xy plane is v = -Bxy3, where B = 0.4 m-3 · s-1, and x
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attached below

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3 0
3 years ago
How do technological artifacts affect the way that you live?
Maslowich

Answer:

Artefacts can influence our actions in several ways. They can be instruments, enabling and facilitating actions, where their presence affects the number and quality of the options for action available to us. They can also influence our actions in a morally more salient way, where their presence changes the likelihood that we will actually perform certain actions. Both kinds of influences are closely related, yet accounts of how they work have been developed largely independently, within different conceptual frameworks and for different purposes. In this paper I account for both kinds of influences within a single framework. Specifically, I develop a descriptive account of how the presence of artefacts affects what we actually do, which is based on a framework commonly used for normative investigations into how the presence of artefacts affects what we can do. This account describes the influence of artefacts on what we actually do in terms of the way facts about those artefacts alter our reasons for action. In developing this account, I will build on Dancy’s (2000a) account of practical reasoning. I will compare my account with two alternatives, those of Latour and Verbeek, and show how my account suggests a specification of their respective key concepts of prescription and invitation. Furthermore, I argue that my account helps us in analysing why the presence of artefacts sometimes fails to influence our actions, contrary to designer expectations or intentions.

When it comes to affecting human actions, it seems artefacts can play two roles. In their first role they can enable or facilitate human actions. Here, the presence of artefacts changes the number and quality of the options for action available to us.Footnote1 For example, their presence makes it possible for us to do things that we would not otherwise be able to do, and thereby adopt new goals, or helps us to do things we would otherwise be able to do, but in more time, with greater effort, etc

Explanation:

Technological artifacts are in general characterized narrowly as material objects made by (human) agents as means to achieve practical ends. ... Unintended by-products of making (e.g. sawdust) or of experiments (e.g. false positives in medical diagnostic tests) are not artifacts for Hilpinen.

3 0
3 years ago
The interior wall of a building is made from 2×4 wood studs, plastered on one side. If the wall is 13 ft high, determine the loa
Elanso [62]

Answer:

load  = 156 lb/ft

Explanation:

given data

interior wall of a building = 2×4 wood studs

plastered = 1 side

wall height =  13 ft

solution

we get here load so first we get wood stud load  and that is  

we know here from ASCE-7 norm

dead load of 2 x 4 wood studs with 1 side plaster  = 12 psf

and we have given height 13 ft

so load will be =  12 psf × 13 ft

load  = 156 lb/ft

7 0
3 years ago
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