1. The document is a student's exam covering topics in English grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension and writing.
2. It includes multiple choice questions, fill-in-the-blank exercises, matching activities and writing prompts related to short passages about European myths and legends.
3. The exam tests the student's knowledge of parts of speech, verb tenses, narrative story structure and summarizing key details from informational texts.
1. The document is a study plan and assignment for an English class at a high school in Colombia.
2. The assignment contains grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension, and writing exercises related to past tenses and European myths and legends.
3. It asks the student to complete sentences, match words to definitions, answer true/false questions about texts, and write a short story based on a sentence prompt.
This document contains an exam from Colegio Metropolitano Real de Minas in Colombia. The exam tests English language skills through multiple choice questions, fill-in-the-blank exercises, and short reading comprehension passages. It covers topics like intelligence types, word formation, parts of speech, narrative tenses, and myths and legends from ancient Greece.
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the solution to address, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging wording, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The document is written by Carmine Gallo and provides tips distilled from analyzing Steve Jobs' product launch presentations.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, making numbers meaningful, revealing a "holy smokes" moment, and practicing presentations extensively. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" to position the presenter as the hero, focusing on benefits rather than features to explain why the audience should care, structuring presentations around the rule of three points, selling dreams and purpose rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging word choices, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The document also encourages practicing presentations extensively.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides with few words, putting numbers into meaningful context, using simple language, building drama through "holy smokes" moments, and extensive practice. The techniques are meant to inform, educate and entertain audiences the Steve Jobs way.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him a master storyteller. These include planning presentations like a movie, focusing on benefits rather than products, using visual slides instead of text, and practicing presentations extensively. The goal is to inform, educate, and entertain audiences the "Steve Jobs way."
1. The document is a study plan and assignment for an English class at a high school in Colombia.
2. The assignment contains grammar, vocabulary, reading comprehension, and writing exercises related to past tenses and European myths and legends.
3. It asks the student to complete sentences, match words to definitions, answer true/false questions about texts, and write a short story based on a sentence prompt.
This document contains an exam from Colegio Metropolitano Real de Minas in Colombia. The exam tests English language skills through multiple choice questions, fill-in-the-blank exercises, and short reading comprehension passages. It covers topics like intelligence types, word formation, parts of speech, narrative tenses, and myths and legends from ancient Greece.
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the solution to address, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging wording, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The document is written by Carmine Gallo and provides tips distilled from analyzing Steve Jobs' product launch presentations.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, making numbers meaningful, revealing a "holy smokes" moment, and practicing presentations extensively. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" to position the presenter as the hero, focusing on benefits rather than features to explain why the audience should care, structuring presentations around the rule of three points, selling dreams and purpose rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging word choices, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The document also encourages practicing presentations extensively.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides with few words, putting numbers into meaningful context, using simple language, building drama through "holy smokes" moments, and extensive practice. The techniques are meant to inform, educate and entertain audiences the Steve Jobs way.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him a master storyteller. These include planning presentations like a movie, focusing on benefits rather than products, using visual slides instead of text, and practicing presentations extensively. The goal is to inform, educate, and entertain audiences the "Steve Jobs way."
The document summarizes 10 techniques for presenting ideas like Steve Jobs as outlined in Carmine Gallo's book "The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs". The techniques include planning presentations visually first before creating slides, focusing on benefits to the audience rather than features, using simple and direct language, and practicing presentations extensively. The goal is to inform, educate, and entertain audiences like Jobs was able to do.
Go tomeeting presentation_secrets_of_steve_jobsnirmalya2k
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the solution to address, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging wording, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The document is written by Carmine Gallo and provides tips distilled from analyzing Steve Jobs' product launch presentations.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, putting numbers in context, practicing presentations extensively, and creating "holy smokes" emotionally charged moments. The overall message is that Jobs transformed product launches into art through meticulous storytelling techniques.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, putting numbers in context, practicing presentations extensively, and creating "holy smokes" emotionally charged moments. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
No matter how good your \'intentions\' are, the world judges your \'presentations\' and no matter how good your \'presentations\' are your boss judges your \'intentions\'
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the solution to address, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging wording, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The tips are based on analyzing Steve Jobs' presentations over decades at Apple.
Traduzione in italiano su http://emozioniemarketing.wordpress.com
da IoManager - Emozioni per lo sviluppo personale e il miglioramento
http://www.iomanager.it
BusinessWeek: The Presentation Secrets of Steve JobsMauricio Godoy
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the audience to rally against, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging word choices, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The tips are based on analyzing Steve Jobs' presentations over several decades at Apple.
Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs - Carmine Gallo - BusinessWeek ColumnistSteven Duque
In The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience, communications coach and BusinessWeek.com columnist Carmine Gallo reveals the techniques that have turned the Apple CEO into one of the world’s most extraordinary corporate storytellers. For more than three decades, Jobs has transformed product launches into an art form. Whether you’re a CEO, manager, entrepreneur, small business owner, or sales or marketing professional, Steve Jobs has something to teach you. Above all, a Steve Jobs presentation is intended to do three things: inform, educate and
entertain. Here are ten steps to accomplishing them.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides with few words, putting numbers into meaningful context, using simple language, building drama through "holy smokes" moments, and extensive practice. The techniques are meant to inform, educate and entertain audiences the Steve Jobs way.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, putting numbers in context, practicing presentations extensively, and creating "holy smokes" emotionally charged moments. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
Go tomeeting presentation_secrets_of_steve_jobsnoeleen368
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, making numbers meaningful, revealing a "holy smokes" moment, and practicing presentations extensively. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
Los secretos de las presentaciones de Steve JobsDavid Aguirre
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the audience to rally against, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging word choices, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The tips are based on analyzing Steve Jobs' presentations over several decades.
This presentation discusses techniques for creating compelling presentations based on lessons from Steve Jobs' presentations. It recommends developing a messianic sense of purpose to inspire audiences. It also suggests simplifying presentations by eliminating clutter, using visuals over words, and revealing "holy shit" moments to make audiences feel something. The presentation is divided into three acts: create the story, deliver the experience, and refine and rehearse.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. It discusses how Jobs planned presentations like movies with heroes and villains. He created simple yet compelling descriptions of products in 140 characters or less. Jobs introduced problems or antagonists that products would solve. He focused on benefits rather than features and used a simple structure of three main points. Jobs sold dreams rather than just products and relied heavily on visual imagery in slides. He made numbers meaningful by providing context and comparisons. Jobs spoke simply using plain language and had dramatic "holy smokes" moments. Above all, he practiced presentations extensively to achieve polished delivery.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. It discusses how Jobs planned presentations like movies with heroes and villains. He created simple yet compelling descriptions of products in 140 characters or less. Jobs introduced problems or antagonists that products could solve. He focused on benefits rather than features and used a simple structure of three main points. Jobs sold dreams rather than just products and relied heavily on visual imagery in slides. He made numbers meaningful by providing context and comparisons. Jobs spoke simply using plain language and had dramatic "holy smokes" moments. Above all, he practiced relentlessly to deliver polished presentations.
The document provides vocabulary related to discussing money and business in English. It includes numbers, financial adjectives and expressions, collocations involving money, idioms related to personal finance, phrasal verbs involving money, and vocabulary for discussing businesses. Students are provided examples and prompts to practice using these terms in conversations about personal finances, business operations, and money management.
How To Teach Informative Writing - Mrs. WinterS BlisTracy Clark
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email; 2) Complete a 10-minute order form with instructions, sources, and deadline; 3) Review bids from writers and select one; 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment; 5) Request revisions until satisfied. It emphasizes original, high-quality work and refunds for plagiarism.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
The document summarizes 10 techniques for presenting ideas like Steve Jobs as outlined in Carmine Gallo's book "The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs". The techniques include planning presentations visually first before creating slides, focusing on benefits to the audience rather than features, using simple and direct language, and practicing presentations extensively. The goal is to inform, educate, and entertain audiences like Jobs was able to do.
Go tomeeting presentation_secrets_of_steve_jobsnirmalya2k
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the solution to address, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging wording, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The document is written by Carmine Gallo and provides tips distilled from analyzing Steve Jobs' product launch presentations.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, putting numbers in context, practicing presentations extensively, and creating "holy smokes" emotionally charged moments. The overall message is that Jobs transformed product launches into art through meticulous storytelling techniques.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, putting numbers in context, practicing presentations extensively, and creating "holy smokes" emotionally charged moments. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
No matter how good your \'intentions\' are, the world judges your \'presentations\' and no matter how good your \'presentations\' are your boss judges your \'intentions\'
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the solution to address, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging wording, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The tips are based on analyzing Steve Jobs' presentations over decades at Apple.
Traduzione in italiano su http://emozioniemarketing.wordpress.com
da IoManager - Emozioni per lo sviluppo personale e il miglioramento
http://www.iomanager.it
BusinessWeek: The Presentation Secrets of Steve JobsMauricio Godoy
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the audience to rally against, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging word choices, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The tips are based on analyzing Steve Jobs' presentations over several decades at Apple.
Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs - Carmine Gallo - BusinessWeek ColumnistSteven Duque
In The Presentation Secrets of Steve Jobs: How to be Insanely Great in Front of Any Audience, communications coach and BusinessWeek.com columnist Carmine Gallo reveals the techniques that have turned the Apple CEO into one of the world’s most extraordinary corporate storytellers. For more than three decades, Jobs has transformed product launches into an art form. Whether you’re a CEO, manager, entrepreneur, small business owner, or sales or marketing professional, Steve Jobs has something to teach you. Above all, a Steve Jobs presentation is intended to do three things: inform, educate and
entertain. Here are ten steps to accomplishing them.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides with few words, putting numbers into meaningful context, using simple language, building drama through "holy smokes" moments, and extensive practice. The techniques are meant to inform, educate and entertain audiences the Steve Jobs way.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, putting numbers in context, practicing presentations extensively, and creating "holy smokes" emotionally charged moments. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
Go tomeeting presentation_secrets_of_steve_jobsnoeleen368
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. These include planning presentations in analog first before digitizing, focusing on benefits rather than products, sticking to the rule of three main points, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides over text, making numbers meaningful, revealing a "holy smokes" moment, and practicing presentations extensively. The document was written by Carmine Gallo to teach business professionals how to give inspiring presentations.
Los secretos de las presentaciones de Steve JobsDavid Aguirre
The document provides 10 tips for presenting ideas in the style of Steve Jobs, including planning presentations through sketching or whiteboarding, creating concise Twitter-friendly descriptions of products or ideas, introducing an "antagonist" problem for the audience to rally against, focusing on benefits rather than features, structuring presentations around the rule of three, selling dreams rather than just products, using visual slides, making numbers meaningful, using engaging word choices, and revealing a dramatic "holy smokes" moment. The tips are based on analyzing Steve Jobs' presentations over several decades.
This presentation discusses techniques for creating compelling presentations based on lessons from Steve Jobs' presentations. It recommends developing a messianic sense of purpose to inspire audiences. It also suggests simplifying presentations by eliminating clutter, using visuals over words, and revealing "holy shit" moments to make audiences feel something. The presentation is divided into three acts: create the story, deliver the experience, and refine and rehearse.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. It discusses how Jobs planned presentations like movies with heroes and villains. He created simple yet compelling descriptions of products in 140 characters or less. Jobs introduced problems or antagonists that products would solve. He focused on benefits rather than features and used a simple structure of three main points. Jobs sold dreams rather than just products and relied heavily on visual imagery in slides. He made numbers meaningful by providing context and comparisons. Jobs spoke simply using plain language and had dramatic "holy smokes" moments. Above all, he practiced presentations extensively to achieve polished delivery.
The document summarizes 10 presentation techniques used by Steve Jobs that made him one of the world's most extraordinary storytellers. It discusses how Jobs planned presentations like movies with heroes and villains. He created simple yet compelling descriptions of products in 140 characters or less. Jobs introduced problems or antagonists that products could solve. He focused on benefits rather than features and used a simple structure of three main points. Jobs sold dreams rather than just products and relied heavily on visual imagery in slides. He made numbers meaningful by providing context and comparisons. Jobs spoke simply using plain language and had dramatic "holy smokes" moments. Above all, he practiced relentlessly to deliver polished presentations.
The document provides vocabulary related to discussing money and business in English. It includes numbers, financial adjectives and expressions, collocations involving money, idioms related to personal finance, phrasal verbs involving money, and vocabulary for discussing businesses. Students are provided examples and prompts to practice using these terms in conversations about personal finances, business operations, and money management.
How To Teach Informative Writing - Mrs. WinterS BlisTracy Clark
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email; 2) Complete a 10-minute order form with instructions, sources, and deadline; 3) Review bids from writers and select one; 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment; 5) Request revisions until satisfied. It emphasizes original, high-quality work and refunds for plagiarism.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
Walmart Business+ and Spark Good for Nonprofits.pdfTechSoup
"Learn about all the ways Walmart supports nonprofit organizations.
You will hear from Liz Willett, the Head of Nonprofits, and hear about what Walmart is doing to help nonprofits, including Walmart Business and Spark Good. Walmart Business+ is a new offer for nonprofits that offers discounts and also streamlines nonprofits order and expense tracking, saving time and money.
The webinar may also give some examples on how nonprofits can best leverage Walmart Business+.
The event will cover the following::
Walmart Business + (https://business.walmart.com/plus) is a new shopping experience for nonprofits, schools, and local business customers that connects an exclusive online shopping experience to stores. Benefits include free delivery and shipping, a 'Spend Analytics” feature, special discounts, deals and tax-exempt shopping.
Special TechSoup offer for a free 180 days membership, and up to $150 in discounts on eligible orders.
Spark Good (walmart.com/sparkgood) is a charitable platform that enables nonprofits to receive donations directly from customers and associates.
Answers about how you can do more with Walmart!"
LAND USE LAND COVER AND NDVI OF MIRZAPUR DISTRICT, UPRAHUL
This Dissertation explores the particular circumstances of Mirzapur, a region located in the
core of India. Mirzapur, with its varied terrains and abundant biodiversity, offers an optimal
environment for investigating the changes in vegetation cover dynamics. Our study utilizes
advanced technologies such as GIS (Geographic Information Systems) and Remote sensing to
analyze the transformations that have taken place over the course of a decade.
The complex relationship between human activities and the environment has been the focus
of extensive research and worry. As the global community grapples with swift urbanization,
population expansion, and economic progress, the effects on natural ecosystems are becoming
more evident. A crucial element of this impact is the alteration of vegetation cover, which plays a
significant role in maintaining the ecological equilibrium of our planet.Land serves as the foundation for all human activities and provides the necessary materials for
these activities. As the most crucial natural resource, its utilization by humans results in different
'Land uses,' which are determined by both human activities and the physical characteristics of the
land.
The utilization of land is impacted by human needs and environmental factors. In countries
like India, rapid population growth and the emphasis on extensive resource exploitation can lead
to significant land degradation, adversely affecting the region's land cover.
Therefore, human intervention has significantly influenced land use patterns over many
centuries, evolving its structure over time and space. In the present era, these changes have
accelerated due to factors such as agriculture and urbanization. Information regarding land use and
cover is essential for various planning and management tasks related to the Earth's surface,
providing crucial environmental data for scientific, resource management, policy purposes, and
diverse human activities.
Accurate understanding of land use and cover is imperative for the development planning
of any area. Consequently, a wide range of professionals, including earth system scientists, land
and water managers, and urban planners, are interested in obtaining data on land use and cover
changes, conversion trends, and other related patterns. The spatial dimensions of land use and
cover support policymakers and scientists in making well-informed decisions, as alterations in
these patterns indicate shifts in economic and social conditions. Monitoring such changes with the
help of Advanced technologies like Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems is
crucial for coordinated efforts across different administrative levels. Advanced technologies like
Remote Sensing and Geographic Information Systems
9
Changes in vegetation cover refer to variations in the distribution, composition, and overall
structure of plant communities across different temporal and spatial scales. These changes can
occur natural.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
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For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
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1. COLEGIO METROPOLITANO REAL DE MINAS
“Formando líderes humanistas con pensamiento empresarial”
ACUMULATIVA
PERÍODO: I - 2022 ASIGNATURA: INGLÉS
ANA MILENA MARTINEZ CASTILLO GRADO: DECIMO FECHA:
ESTUDIANTE:
1 Circle the correct option.
1 If you have bodily-kinaesthetic / visual-spatial intelligence, you control your body very well.
2 A logo / slogan should have a shape that the brain recognises easily.
3 Lily takes thoughtful / meticulous notes in class and always passes her exams.
4 People who are talkative / systematic and empathise with others have interpersonal intelligence.
5 My aunt is an employee / entrepreneur. She started her own business when she was 20.
6 What makes a consumer want to buy a design / product?
2. Order the letters to make words.
1 Sara is so ___________________(kaeltativ), she speaks to everyone
2 I am ____________(tivercea), that’s why I love drawing and painting.
3 Brian is really _____________(tcaive). He’s always doing sports.
4 My sister is really systematic and________________ (iulosumetc) with her schoolwork. Her notes look lovely and she
passes all her exams.
5 Jane has a lot of friends because she is very ___________________(asleboci).
3. Match the underlined words to the correct sentences.
1 Terry is so modest. He never talks about his amazing failures.
2 Her persevere to improve is really inspiring.
3 In order to reach our goals, we should learn from our bankrupt.
4 He was always late for work and in the end, he was achievements.
5 If you want to achieve your dreams, you need to motivation.
6 The company lost all its money and went fired.
4. Choose the correct option.
Do you have a ¹ passion / passionate for writing and great ideas? Are you ² creativity / creative and enthusiastic? Then
read on to find ways to turn your ideas into a ³ novel / theme. Before you start to write, remove all ⁴ distract /
distractions from the room. Now, focus on the genre. Are you going to write about fact or ⁵ fiction / fictional? Next,
make notes on the plot, the setting and the ⁶ characters / person in your story. What will your heroes and ⁷ villains /
humans be like? Remember, a lot of writers get inspiration from ⁸ legends / resolutions and other stories from the past,
so when you are not writing, you should read different kinds of literature
GRAMMAR
5 Complete the sentences with the verbs in the past simple.
1 Steve Jobs___________ (design) Apple personal computers in the 1970s.
2 He____________ (start) his own business in 1976.
3 He ___________(buy) the film company Pixar in 1986.
4 He_____________ (not launch) the iPhone in 1997. He launched it in 2007.
6. Complete the conversation with the verbs in the correct form
2. Joe: Dad, tell me the secret to your success.
Dad: Well, since I was young, I ¹ _____________(work) hard to be successful, Joe. I ²_________________ (get) my first
job when I was fifteen, although I ³______________________ (not start) my own company until 1995
Joe: How did you ⁴- _________________ (think) of the idea for your company?
Dad: I saw that people needed a product and I created it. Today, we ___________⁵ (sell) thousands of our products
every day.
7. Reading
A look at three best-selling products
The Tamagotchi :
The Tamagotchi was created in Japan in 1996. It was a virtual pet in the form of a small electronic toy and became really
popular with thousands of young children around the world. You had to feed your Tamagotchi and check your pet’s age,
weight and happiness every day to help it to grow. In fact, Tamagotchis were designed to die if you didn’t look after
them properly! At first, the Tamagotchi was very popular and seventy-six million were sold by 2010. However, people
eventually lost interest and stopped buying them.
The iPad The company Apple is known for its famous logo. It was set up by the entrepreneurs Steve Jobs and Steve
Wozniak. The iPad was launched in 2010, a product that continues to increase in popularity. With an iPad, you can read
and send emails, watch videos, listen to music, play games and read e-books. Apple still continues to come up with new
ideas and products. It really is a resourceful company!
The Fitbit The Fitbit has revolutionised how people do exercise and it has also helped us to learn more about our
bodies and our health. In fact, 25.4 million people around the world have bought this product. It is designed to check
facts about our health, what we eat and how we sleep, and helps us to organise our day by sending and checking
messages, emails and calls. It’s certainly a very creative product.
Read the text and match the parts of the sentences.
1 Japan a of people loved the Tamagotchi.
2 76 million b is the year the iPad became available.
3 Thousands c people use the Fitbit.
4 2010 d virtual pets were bought by 2010.
5 25.4 million e is where the Tamagotchi was launched
Read the text again and decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F)
1 You could use a Tamagotchi to send emails. ______
2 Tamagotchis have recently become popular. ______
3 The iPad is a virtual pet. ______
4 The Fitbit has changed the way people do exercise. ______
5 The Fitbit only monitors exercise _______
8. Circle the event that happened first
1 By the time we arrived, the cinema had closed.
2 Tom went to speak to his boss, but she had already left.
3 By 2004, my uncle was very rich because he had sold a lot of shoes.
4 By the time Walt Disney was twenty-five, he had started his first company.
9 Circle the correct option
1 By the time the year finished, I had improved / improved my marks in English by 10%.
2 She had made a million euros by the time she was / had been 30 years old.
3. 3 Mike wanted to show us the new product that he created / had created.
4 We had an idea for a product, but somebody had already invented / already invented it
10. Circle the correct option.
Disney ¹ released / had released Frozen in 2013, but they didn’t expect it to become an overnight success. They ² had
already made / already made a lot of successful films before then, but by the time Frozen won an Oscar in 2014, it ³ had
become / became the highest-earning animated film of all time and millions of people all over the world ⁴ saw / had seen
it. The song ‘Let It Go’ won two Grammy Awards. Today, the story of Elsa, Anna and Olaf continues to be popular with
adults and children around the world.
11. Complete the sentences with the words. There are three extra words.
Achievements amusement bankrupt business create empire fired theme
1 In the future, I want to run my own and be my own boss.
2 Walt Disney released many films and his are very well known.
3 The company closed down because it went last year.
4 Jim was from his job because he was late every day
5 Bill Gates has created a huge business .
12. Complete the sentences with the verbs in the correct form
Disney ¹_____________ (release) Frozen in 2013, however, the cast and crew ² ______________(not expect) it to become
an overnight success. They ³ ___________(make) a lot of successful films before this, but by the time Frozen won an Oscar
in 2014, it ⁴ ___________(become) the highest-earning animated film of all time. Millions of people ⁵________ (go) to see
Frozen and the song ‘Let It Go’ ⁶_____________ (win) two Grammy Awards. The sequel, Frozen II, ⁷_____________ (be)
also a big success in 2019.
13 Complete the conversation with the verbs in the present simple, past simple or present perfect
be design launch make not work start work
Journalist: Ingrid, you are only twenty and you ¹______________ already your own company. You ² ___________a million
pounds last year! What ³ _________your secret?
Ingrid: Well, I ⁴ ___________very hard since I was a teenager. You can’t be successful if you ⁵ __________hard for it!
Journalist: When ⁶ _______________you your first product?
Ingrid: In 2018. And I ⁷ _________logo myself.
14. Complete the sentences with the verbs in the past simple or the past continuous.
1 The war began in 1668 and __________________(not end) until 1701.
2 The people of Troy pulled the Trojan horse into the city because they didn’t know the Greeks
_______________________________(hide) inside.
3 When the villain________________________ (arrive), the people were scared.
4 He _________________________(walk) in the forest when he saw a fairy
5 When he told me the secret, I_____________________ (not believe) him.
15. Write the sentences in reported speech.
1 ‘I miss my family.’
She said that she_____________________________________________________________________
2. ‘I’m not dying!’
4. He told us that he____________________________________________________________________
3. ‘I’m not dying!’
He told us that he_____________________________________________________________________
16 Reading
European myths and legends
Mount Olympus, Greece Mount Olympus is the highest mountain in Greece. According to Greek mythology, 12 gods lived
on Mount Olympus, including the father of all the gods, Zeus, and his daughter Athena. Zeus had 92 sons and daughters,
but his favourite child was Athena, the goddess of knowledge and war. One day, when Athena went down to Earth, she
gave the people a beautiful gift. It was the first olive tree.
Corfu, Greece
On this beautiful island you can find the palace Achilleion, which was home to the god Achilles. According to the legend,
when he was a baby, Achilles’ mother wanted to protect him from harm. She held him by the heel and washed him in a
river with magical powers. Although Achilles became a great soldier, his heel was his weakness because it hadn’t touched
the water. In the Trojan war, enemy soldiers killed him by shooting him in the heel.
Avalon, England
King Arthur was a legendary king of Britain who defended the kingdom from invasion. When Arthur was fifteen, he pulled
his famous sword Excalibur from a stone. He was a brave and good king and was finally injured in battle and taken to the
island of Avalon to die. Historians are not sure whether he really existed or no.
17. Read the text and complete the sentences.
1______________________________________________ gods lived on Mount Olympus.
2 Zeus had________________________________ children.
3 Achilleion is on the island of .____________________________________
4 Achilles was killed by ________________________________soldiers.
5 King Arthur was______________________________ years old when he found his famous sword.
6 Arthur was injured in __________________________________and taken to Avalon to die.
18. Read the text again and find words for the definitions.
1 Having a lot of courage: b___________________________
2 A battle: w___________________________
3 A large building: p___________________________
4 The back of the foot: h____________________________
5 Land surrounded by water: i_____________________________
6 Something you give as a present: g________________________
7 Injury or hurt: h_________________________
19. ---20 Write a story that starts with one of the sentences.
Imogen was a brave young girl who wanted to go on an adventure.
▪ The people of Kasala were frightened because a giant had threatened their city for many years. –
Think about the setting, main characters, conflict and resolution. –
Use narrative tenses. –
Include connectors, e.g. Then / Finally / After several months / Suddenly ANSWER AT THE BACK OF YOUR SHEET
____________________________________________________________________________________________
_____________________________________________________________________________________________