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【简答题】
()不涉及消费者在购买商品时应享有的权利。
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【单选题】当鼠标指针移到页面上的某个图片上时,图片出现一个边框,并且图片放大,这是因为激发下面的( )事件。
A.
onclick
B.
onmousemove
C.
onmouseout
D.
onmousedown
【简答题】间隙配合中,孔的实际尺寸总是大于轴的实际尺寸。公差带图中的零线通常表示()
【简答题】读钻模装配图,并填空。 (1)φ20H7/n6是件号____和件号____的配合尺寸,属于____制的____配合,H7表示____的公差带代号,n6表示____的公差带代号,7和6代表____。该钻模是由 ____种共 ____个零件组成。 (2)零件1底座的侧面有 ____ 个弧形槽,其作用是排出加工铁屑。 图中双点划线表示 ____,系 ____画法。 三个孔钻完后,先...
【单选题】当鼠标指针移到页面上的某个图片上时,图片出现一个边框,并且图片放大,这是因为激发了下面的( )事件。
A.
onclick
B.
onmouseover
C.
onmouseout
D.
onmousedown
【单选题】当鼠标指针移到页面上的某个图片上时,图片出现一个边框,并且图片放大,这是因为激发了下面的 ( )事件。
A.
onclick
B.
onmousemove
C.
onmouseout
D.
onmousedown
【单选题】当鼠标指针移到页面上的某个图片上时,图片出现一个边框,并且图片放大,这是因为触发了下面的( )事件。
A.
onclick
B.
onmousemove
C.
onmouseout
D.
onmouseover
【简答题】长江公司为母公司,2007年1月1日,长江公司用银行存款19000万元从证券市场上购入大海公司发行在外60%的股份并能够控制大海公司。同日,大海公司账面所有者权益为30000万元(与可辨认净资产公允价值相等),其中:股本为20000万元,资本公积为2000万元,盈余公积为800万元,未分配利润为7200万元。长江公司和大海公司不属于同一控制的两个公司。长江公司和大海公司所得税均采用债务法核算,20...
【单选题】第一篇Reading Comprehension: Managers spend a great deal of their time in meetings. Acc
A.
1:第一篇Reading Comprehension: Managers spend a great deal of their time in meetings. According to Henry Mintzberg, in his book, The Nature of Managerial Work, managers in large organizations spend only 22% of their time on meetings. So what are the managers doing in those meetings? There have conventionally been two answers. The first is the academic version: Managers are coordinating and controlling, making decisions, solving problems and planning. This interpretation has been largely discredited because it ignores the social and political forces at work in meetings. The second version claims that meetings provide little more than strategic sites for corporate gladiators to perform before the organizational emperors. This perspective is far more attractive, and has given rise to a large, and often humorous, body of literature on gamesmanship and posturing in meetings. It is, of course, true that meeting rooms serve as shop windows for managerial talent, but this is far from the truth as a whole. The suggestion that meetings are actually battle grounds is misleading since the raison d'etre of meetings has far more to do with comfort than conflict. Meetings are actually vital props, both for the participants and the organization as a whole. For the organization, meetings, represent recording devices. The minutes of meetings catalogue the change of the organization, at all levels, in a more systematic way than do the assorted memos and directives which are scattered about the company. They enshrine the minutes of corporate history, they itemize proposed actions and outcomes in a way which makes one look like the natural culmination of the other. The whole tenor of the minutes is one of total premeditation and implied continuity. They are a sanitized version of reality which suggests a reassuring level of control over events. What is more, the minutes record the debating of certain issues in an official and democratic forum, so that those not involved in the process can be assured that the decision was not taken lightly. As Dong Bennett, an administrative and financial manager with Allied Breweries, explains: 'Time and effort are seen to have been invested in scrutinizing a certain course of action.' Key individuals are also seen to have put their names behind that particular course of action. The decision can therefore proceed with the full weight of the organization behind it, even if it actually went through 'on the nod'. At the same time, the burden of responsibility is spread, so that no individual takes the blame. Thus, the public nature of formal meetings confers a degree of legitimacy on what happens in them. Having a view pass unchallenged at a meeting can be taken to indicate consensus. However, meetings also serve as an alibi for action, as demonstrated by one manager who explained to his subordinates: 'I did what I could to prevent it—I had our objections minutes in two meetings.' The proof of conspicuous effort was there in black and white. By merely attending meetings, managers buttress their status, while non-attendance can carry with it a certain stigma. Whether individual managers intend to make a contribution or not, it is satisfying to be considered one of those whose views matter. Ostracism, for senior managers, is not being invited to meetings. As one cynic observed, meetings are comfortingly tangible: 'Who on the shop floor really believes that managers are working when they tour the works? But assemble them behind closed doors and call it a meeting and everyone will take it for granted that they are hard at work.' Managers are being seen to earn their corn. Meetings provide managers with another form of comfort too—that of formality. Meetings follow a fixed format: Exchanges are ritualized, the participants are probably known in advance, there is often a written agenda, and there is a chance to prepare. Little wonder then, that they come as welcome relief from the upheaval and uncertainty of life outside the meeting room. Managers can draw further comfort from the realization that their peers are every bit as bemused and fallible as themselves. Meetings provide constant reminders that they share the same problems, preoccupations and anxieties, that they are all in the same boat. And for those who may be slightly adrift, meetings are ideal occasions for gently pulling them round. As Steve Styles, the process control manager (life services) at Legal & General, puts it: 'The mere presence of others in meetings adds weight to teasing or censure and helps you to 'round up the strays'.' Such gatherings therefore provide solace and direction for the management team—a security blanket for managers. Meetings do serve a multitude of means as well as ends. They relieve managerial stress and facilitate consensus. For the organization, they have a safety-net-cum-rubber-stamping function without which decisions could not proceed, much less gather momentum. In short, meetings are fundamental to the well-being of managers and organizations alike. Why are the minutes of meetings important foe a company? A.They provide a clear history of the firm and its evolution.
B.
They concentrate scattered memos and directives in One synthetic document.
C.
They reflect decision-making and control over company life.
D.
They record any individual disagreements with company decisions.
【单选题】You are a security administrator for your company. The network consists of a single Active Directory domain. All servers run Windows Server 2003. The network contains three member servers named Server...
A.
Enable the Server3 computer account in Active Directory as trusted for delegation.
B.
Assign the Authenticated Users group the Allow - Allowed to Authenticate permission for the Server3 computer acc
C.
Assign the Server3 computer account the Allow. Read permission on the RAS and IAS Servers access Check cont
D.
Add the Server3 computer account to the RAS and IAS Servers security group.
E.
Add the Server3 computer account to the Windows Authorization Access Group security group.
【简答题】配合公差带图中的零线表示 。
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【单选题】第一篇Reading Comprehension: Managers spend a great deal of their time in meetings. Acc
A.
1:第一篇Reading Comprehension: Managers spend a great deal of their time in meetings. According to Henry Mintzberg, in his book, The Nature of Managerial Work, managers in large organizations spend only 22% of their time on meetings. So what are the managers doing in those meetings? There have conventionally been two answers. The first is the academic version: Managers are coordinating and controlling, making decisions, solving problems and planning. This interpretation has been largely discredited because it ignores the social and political forces at work in meetings. The second version claims that meetings provide little more than strategic sites for corporate gladiators to perform before the organizational emperors. This perspective is far more attractive, and has given rise to a large, and often humorous, body of literature on gamesmanship and posturing in meetings. It is, of course, true that meeting rooms serve as shop windows for managerial talent, but this is far from the truth as a whole. The suggestion that meetings are actually battle grounds is misleading since the raison d'etre of meetings has far more to do with comfort than conflict. Meetings are actually vital props, both for the participants and the organization as a whole. For the organization, meetings, represent recording devices. The minutes of meetings catalogue the change of the organization, at all levels, in a more systematic way than do the assorted memos and directives which are scattered about the company. They enshrine the minutes of corporate history, they itemize proposed actions and outcomes in a way which makes one look like the natural culmination of the other. The whole tenor of the minutes is one of total premeditation and implied continuity. They are a sanitized version of reality which suggests a reassuring level of control over events. What is more, the minutes record the debating of certain issues in an official and democratic forum, so that those not involved in the process can be assured that the decision was not taken lightly. As Dong Bennett, an administrative and financial manager with Allied Breweries, explains: 'Time and effort are seen to have been invested in scrutinizing a certain course of action.' Key individuals are also seen to have put their names behind that particular course of action. The decision can therefore proceed with the full weight of the organization behind it, even if it actually went through 'on the nod'. At the same time, the burden of responsibility is spread, so that no individual takes the blame. Thus, the public nature of formal meetings confers a degree of legitimacy on what happens in them. Having a view pass unchallenged at a meeting can be taken to indicate consensus. However, meetings also serve as an alibi for action, as demonstrated by one manager who explained to his subordinates: 'I did what I could to prevent it—I had our objections minutes in two meetings.' The proof of conspicuous effort was there in black and white. By merely attending meetings, managers buttress their status, while non-attendance can carry with it a certain stigma. Whether individual managers intend to make a contribution or not, it is satisfying to be considered one of those whose views matter. Ostracism, for senior managers, is not being invited to meetings. As one cynic observed, meetings are comfortingly tangible: 'Who on the shop floor really believes that managers are working when they tour the works? But assemble them behind closed doors and call it a meeting and everyone will take it for granted that they are hard at work.' Managers are being seen to earn their corn. Meetings provide managers with another form of comfort too—that of formality. Meetings follow a fixed format: Exchanges are ritualized, the participants are probably known in advance, there is often a written agenda, and there is a chance to prepare. Little wonder then, that they come as welcome relief from the upheaval and uncertainty of life outside the meeting room. Managers can draw further comfort from the realization that their peers are every bit as bemused and fallible as themselves. Meetings provide constant reminders that they share the same problems, preoccupations and anxieties, that they are all in the same boat. And for those who may be slightly adrift, meetings are ideal occasions for gently pulling them round. As Steve Styles, the process control manager (life services) at Legal & General, puts it: 'The mere presence of others in meetings adds weight to teasing or censure and helps you to 'round up the strays'.' Such gatherings therefore provide solace and direction for the management team—a security blanket for managers. Meetings do serve a multitude of means as well as ends. They relieve managerial stress and facilitate consensus. For the organization, they have a safety-net-cum-rubber-stamping function without which decisions could not proceed, much less gather momentum. In short, meetings are fundamental to the well-being of managers and organizations alike. Why are the minutes of meetings important foe a company? A.They provide a clear history of the firm and its evolution.
B.
They concentrate scattered memos and directives in One synthetic document.
C.
They reflect decision-making and control over company life.
D.
They record any individual disagreements with company decisions.
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