This document is a proposal form for a portraiture assignment asking the student to choose a material to use, explain why it is important to them, and how they will show a range of values in the chosen material. It also asks the student to propose poses, which can reference art history, and provides a space for thumbnail sketches. It notes the due date for materials and includes a section for the proposal grade.
1) This document is a final project report submitted by a group of 6 students for their Constructed Landscape module. It details the proposal of a green space for a 10m x 10m site on the Taylor's University campus.
2) The group analyzed the site and proposed "Sky Wheel Garden" - a recreation area centered around a lawn and pergola. The master plan, planting plan, elements, and maintenance plan are included.
3) Sustainable approaches for the garden include using solar powered fountains and lights as well as sound absorbing plants and water features to reduce noise from nearby buildings.
The document describes a proposed Ubi-com architectural pavilion for the Yeosu Expo featuring an elevator system and modular space units. Elevators would provide access to various function-specific modular units divided within the space, such as private rooms, entertainment areas, and public spaces. An information system would direct visitors to available units based on their needs. The proposal aims to create a more dynamic architectural environment through ubiquitous computing rather than rigidly defined physical spaces.
This document provides guidance on how to write an effective research proposal in 3 parts:
1. It defines what a research proposal is and lists its key elements, including the title, abstract, introduction, objectives, literature review, methods, results, discussion, and references.
2. It provides tips for each element, such as keeping the title concise and descriptive, including the research question and design in the abstract, and ensuring the literature review integrates existing research.
3. It discusses common mistakes to avoid, like lacking proper context, failing to delimit the research boundaries clearly, and not accurately representing prior studies. The goal is to help researchers develop a well-focused, evidence-based argument for their proposed
This document summarizes Von Thunen's theory of agricultural land use patterns. Some key points:
- Von Thunen theorized that the type of crop grown on a piece of land depends on its distance from the market - farms closer to markets grow crops that have higher transport costs, while more distant farms grow crops that are cheaper to transport.
- Proximity to markets matters because of direct transport costs, perishability of crops, risk of damage during transport, and technology changes.
- Von Thunen developed a model showing concentric zones of land use around a city depending on transport costs, with specialized crops closest to the city and extensive field crops farther out.
- The model is
The document provides a vision and development outline for an Equine Center and adjacent residential community in Chino Valley, Arizona. Key details include:
- The Equine Center would have facilities like barns, arenas, driving courses, and a grand prix stadium to host various equine events. Hospitality facilities like a hotel and cottages would also be included.
- Residential communities with homes ranging from 5-40 acres would be developed adjacent to the Equine Center to provide housing. Trails would connect the communities to the center.
- Preliminary projections estimate the Equine Center could generate $9-12.5 million annually in revenue. Total development costs are estimated at $20 million.
This document discusses factors that influence the location of industrial activity, including primary industries locating near resource deposits and secondary industries considering transportation costs of raw materials and finished goods. It summarizes Alfred Weber's least cost theory of industrial location and describes how transportation, labor, infrastructure, energy, agglomeration, and other political and environmental factors affect site selection. Silicon Valley is provided as an example of an industrial agglomeration influenced by proximity to a university, skilled labor, and natural resource abundance.
How To Write A Three Part Thesis Statement by Mrs. ScruggsWendy Scruggs
The document provides guidance on constructing a good thesis statement, noting it should be arguable, have three parts, and use parallel structure. It recommends choosing a topic that requires proving, then identifying three key points to argue. As an example thesis, it suggests arguing social networks are good for society by showing they connect people, educate people, and entertain people. Parallel structure is achieved by using the same verb form to start each key point.
This document is a proposal form for a portraiture assignment asking the student to choose a material to use, explain why it is important to them, and how they will show a range of values in the chosen material. It also asks the student to propose poses, which can reference art history, and provides a space for thumbnail sketches. It notes the due date for materials and includes a section for the proposal grade.
1) This document is a final project report submitted by a group of 6 students for their Constructed Landscape module. It details the proposal of a green space for a 10m x 10m site on the Taylor's University campus.
2) The group analyzed the site and proposed "Sky Wheel Garden" - a recreation area centered around a lawn and pergola. The master plan, planting plan, elements, and maintenance plan are included.
3) Sustainable approaches for the garden include using solar powered fountains and lights as well as sound absorbing plants and water features to reduce noise from nearby buildings.
The document describes a proposed Ubi-com architectural pavilion for the Yeosu Expo featuring an elevator system and modular space units. Elevators would provide access to various function-specific modular units divided within the space, such as private rooms, entertainment areas, and public spaces. An information system would direct visitors to available units based on their needs. The proposal aims to create a more dynamic architectural environment through ubiquitous computing rather than rigidly defined physical spaces.
This document provides guidance on how to write an effective research proposal in 3 parts:
1. It defines what a research proposal is and lists its key elements, including the title, abstract, introduction, objectives, literature review, methods, results, discussion, and references.
2. It provides tips for each element, such as keeping the title concise and descriptive, including the research question and design in the abstract, and ensuring the literature review integrates existing research.
3. It discusses common mistakes to avoid, like lacking proper context, failing to delimit the research boundaries clearly, and not accurately representing prior studies. The goal is to help researchers develop a well-focused, evidence-based argument for their proposed
This document summarizes Von Thunen's theory of agricultural land use patterns. Some key points:
- Von Thunen theorized that the type of crop grown on a piece of land depends on its distance from the market - farms closer to markets grow crops that have higher transport costs, while more distant farms grow crops that are cheaper to transport.
- Proximity to markets matters because of direct transport costs, perishability of crops, risk of damage during transport, and technology changes.
- Von Thunen developed a model showing concentric zones of land use around a city depending on transport costs, with specialized crops closest to the city and extensive field crops farther out.
- The model is
The document provides a vision and development outline for an Equine Center and adjacent residential community in Chino Valley, Arizona. Key details include:
- The Equine Center would have facilities like barns, arenas, driving courses, and a grand prix stadium to host various equine events. Hospitality facilities like a hotel and cottages would also be included.
- Residential communities with homes ranging from 5-40 acres would be developed adjacent to the Equine Center to provide housing. Trails would connect the communities to the center.
- Preliminary projections estimate the Equine Center could generate $9-12.5 million annually in revenue. Total development costs are estimated at $20 million.
This document discusses factors that influence the location of industrial activity, including primary industries locating near resource deposits and secondary industries considering transportation costs of raw materials and finished goods. It summarizes Alfred Weber's least cost theory of industrial location and describes how transportation, labor, infrastructure, energy, agglomeration, and other political and environmental factors affect site selection. Silicon Valley is provided as an example of an industrial agglomeration influenced by proximity to a university, skilled labor, and natural resource abundance.
How To Write A Three Part Thesis Statement by Mrs. ScruggsWendy Scruggs
The document provides guidance on constructing a good thesis statement, noting it should be arguable, have three parts, and use parallel structure. It recommends choosing a topic that requires proving, then identifying three key points to argue. As an example thesis, it suggests arguing social networks are good for society by showing they connect people, educate people, and entertain people. Parallel structure is achieved by using the same verb form to start each key point.
This document discusses how to write a thesis statement that lists points to preview the ideas in the body paragraphs. It recommends determining an overall stance on the topic and supporting arguments. As an example, it presents a stance that school uniforms should be required and lists three sub-topics or reasons to support this: that uniforms improve student-teacher relations, encourage solidarity, and enhance school safety. It advises combining these sub-topics into a parallel structure thesis statement and writing at least one body paragraph in support of each sub-topic.
Von Thunen developed an agricultural model to explain land use patterns around a central business district (CBD). His model showed that the cost of renting or purchasing land decreases the farther away from the CBD it is located, due to increased transportation costs of shipping goods to market. While the model provided insights, it made simplifying assumptions and did not account for technological advances or other factors that influence modern agricultural land use. The core principles still apply to some extent, but the model has limited real-world application today.
The Factors That Affect To Location Of Industrygeographypods
The document summarizes the key factors that affect the location of industry:
1) Land availability and cost, access to raw materials, labor supply, transportation infrastructure, energy sources, proximity to markets, and government incentives all influence where industries choose to locate.
2) Modern industries are less restricted in their location choices and may prioritize quality of life factors for workers, though access to raw materials, labor, transportation, and markets remain important determinants for many industries.
Centripetal forces keep countries together by promoting unity, such as nationalism through shared language, religion, and culture. They also include unifying institutions like schools and media, as well as common threats that unite people against a shared enemy. Transportation and communication infrastructure also bind a country together by connecting different regions. Centrifugal forces break countries apart by promoting division along ethnic, economic, or spatial lines and include the rise of subnational and regional identities that want more autonomy. Devolution is the transfer of powers from a central government to local governments and can happen gradually over time or cause a state to break up.
This document discusses Johann von Thunen's model of agricultural land use. The model predicts concentric rings of agricultural activity radiating out from a central market city, with the most intensive, perishable crops closest to market and more extensive livestock grazing further out. Factors like transportation costs, land costs, and climate determine which crops are grown in each ring. The document applies the model to different geographic contexts and discusses how transportation changes like rivers and railroads would impact the model's predictions. It also compares the model to real-world agricultural land use patterns.
the major theories of industrial location were developed by the economists. some of them which we consider pioneering and useful in understanding the locational behaviour of firm are explained here.
Two major theories namely :(1) Weber's Theory. (2) The market area theory of Tord Palander.
The document discusses different types of industry and factors that influence industrial location. It covers primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary industries. Key factors in industrial location include availability of raw materials, labor supply, markets, transportation access, capital, energy sources, and government policies. Location theories aim to maximize profits and minimize costs by considering these various economic and transportation factors. Theories discussed include Weber's least-cost model and the concept of agglomeration economies.
Metode Von Thunen menyatakan bahwa harga tanah ditentukan oleh jaraknya dari pusat kota. Model ini mengasumsikan kondisi homogen dan biaya angkut yang berbanding lurus dengan jarak. Harga tanah diprediksi menggunakan regresi linier sederhana antara harga dan jarak ke pusat kota.
There are several key factors that affect where industry chooses to locate, including accessibility to transportation for importing and exporting materials, a climate that attracts workers, availability of flat land and power, access to capital, communication links, government incentives, available labor supply, and access to markets. Industry classifications include primary industries dealing with raw materials, secondary industries involving manufacturing, tertiary industries providing services, and quaternary industries focused on research and development.
Alfred Weber developed the theory of location which assumed fixed centers of consumption and labor supply. The theory states that transportation costs and labor costs are the primary factors influencing the location of industries. According to Weber, industries will locate near raw material sources if the material index is greater than 1, and near markets if the material index is less than 1. The optimal location is the point where transportation costs and labor costs are minimized.
The Weber model of industrial location uses transportation costs to predict where industries will locate. It assumes firms face no risks and have identical production costs everywhere. Raw materials can be ubiquitous and found everywhere or localized in certain areas.
Weber developed diagrams to show least cost locations. A straight line diagram shows the location when one raw material is localized and one is ubiquitous. A triangular diagram shows when two raw materials are localized. Isotims represent lines of equal transportation costs, while isodapanes connect points of equal total transportation costs to determine the overall least cost location. Agglomeration economies, or savings from locating near other firms, are also considered.
The document discusses proposal writing and provides information on the purpose, types, qualities, and structure of proposals. Some key points:
- Proposals aim to obtain commercial contracts by persuading readers to accept an idea or plan. They can be written in response to a request or without one.
- Proposals should clearly explain what is being proposed, how it will be executed, the timeline, and costs. The goal is to educate and convince the reader to take the requested action.
- Proposals can be internal or external, solicited or unsolicited. Good proposals understand customer needs, specify clear scopes, and highlight benefits while managing risks.
- Proposals follow a basic structure of an
This document provides an executive summary and proposal from Word-for-Word Transcription Service for transcription services. It outlines the company's background and experience since 2001, including that transcription is done by a small group of expert linguists. It also provides references from past clients like Creative Transcriptions and the law firm Dunn & Martin LLP who were satisfied with the company's accurate and timely transcription work. The proposal highlights competitive pricing and the ability to take on the entire proposed project or portions of it.
There are four main theories of industrial location:
1) Weber's (1909) least cost theory, which states that industries locate where transportation costs of raw materials and finished products are minimized. This depends on whether the industry is weight gaining or weight losing.
2) Hotelling's (1929) theory of locational interdependence, which examines how demand impacts location as competitors try to capture market share in their locations.
3) Losch's (1939) theory of demand-oriented location, which focused on maximizing access to markets for finished goods.
4) Smith and Pred's (1971) profit-maximization theory examining how firms locate based on profit considerations.
This presentation was presented by me to explain the various factors affecting industries by taking the case study of Tata Steel, Gujarat and Punjab.
It was a part of the subject "Facilities Design" of Industrial Engineering at Thapar University, Patiala
A proposal is a marketing tool designed to convince readers to accept an offer to complete a project. Proposal writers must understand the needs of their audience and competitors to research problems and propose effective solutions. A successful proposal will follow conventions, demonstrate the writer's qualifications, and tell a story to fill a need, create desire, and solve problems for the client in an ethical manner.
The document proposes constructing a one-storey residential building to address the client's housing needs. It will include three bedrooms, two kitchens, and a porch. The building will cost approximately 1.15 million pesos to build and will solve the client's current problems of high rental costs and transportation expenses, while providing a comfortable living environment. Facility requirements like appliances, electricity, and water access are also addressed. The construction is proposed to alleviate the client's housing issues for many years.
This is no joke. If you're an entrepreneur and you have customers, then you need to forget everything you ever heard about target marketing and check out this SlideShare
This document discusses WordPress widgets and how they can be used. It explains that widgets can be placed in sidebars, footers, or tops of pages. It provides examples of default widgets like text and categories. It outlines how to add widgets by dragging and dropping them and how to save or remove widgets. Potential issues are also addressed, such as updates wiping widgets or migration difficulties.
The document discusses setting up a Google+ author profile and verifying it through Google Webmaster Tools to have author information displayed in search results. It recommends adding a profile photo, filling out profile information, and testing that rich snippets are being pulled from the profile. The assistant encourages completing the profile setup and verification to improve search visibility and increase website conversions.
The document provides recipes for healthy desserts made with Shakeology meal replacement powder. It includes recipes for sorbets, pies, no-bake cookies, bars, frozen pops, and mousse/pudding that use Shakeology, fruits, nuts, dairy alternatives and other wholesome ingredients. The recipes yield 2-10 servings each and provide instructions for preparation.
This document discusses how to write a thesis statement that lists points to preview the ideas in the body paragraphs. It recommends determining an overall stance on the topic and supporting arguments. As an example, it presents a stance that school uniforms should be required and lists three sub-topics or reasons to support this: that uniforms improve student-teacher relations, encourage solidarity, and enhance school safety. It advises combining these sub-topics into a parallel structure thesis statement and writing at least one body paragraph in support of each sub-topic.
Von Thunen developed an agricultural model to explain land use patterns around a central business district (CBD). His model showed that the cost of renting or purchasing land decreases the farther away from the CBD it is located, due to increased transportation costs of shipping goods to market. While the model provided insights, it made simplifying assumptions and did not account for technological advances or other factors that influence modern agricultural land use. The core principles still apply to some extent, but the model has limited real-world application today.
The Factors That Affect To Location Of Industrygeographypods
The document summarizes the key factors that affect the location of industry:
1) Land availability and cost, access to raw materials, labor supply, transportation infrastructure, energy sources, proximity to markets, and government incentives all influence where industries choose to locate.
2) Modern industries are less restricted in their location choices and may prioritize quality of life factors for workers, though access to raw materials, labor, transportation, and markets remain important determinants for many industries.
Centripetal forces keep countries together by promoting unity, such as nationalism through shared language, religion, and culture. They also include unifying institutions like schools and media, as well as common threats that unite people against a shared enemy. Transportation and communication infrastructure also bind a country together by connecting different regions. Centrifugal forces break countries apart by promoting division along ethnic, economic, or spatial lines and include the rise of subnational and regional identities that want more autonomy. Devolution is the transfer of powers from a central government to local governments and can happen gradually over time or cause a state to break up.
This document discusses Johann von Thunen's model of agricultural land use. The model predicts concentric rings of agricultural activity radiating out from a central market city, with the most intensive, perishable crops closest to market and more extensive livestock grazing further out. Factors like transportation costs, land costs, and climate determine which crops are grown in each ring. The document applies the model to different geographic contexts and discusses how transportation changes like rivers and railroads would impact the model's predictions. It also compares the model to real-world agricultural land use patterns.
the major theories of industrial location were developed by the economists. some of them which we consider pioneering and useful in understanding the locational behaviour of firm are explained here.
Two major theories namely :(1) Weber's Theory. (2) The market area theory of Tord Palander.
The document discusses different types of industry and factors that influence industrial location. It covers primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary industries. Key factors in industrial location include availability of raw materials, labor supply, markets, transportation access, capital, energy sources, and government policies. Location theories aim to maximize profits and minimize costs by considering these various economic and transportation factors. Theories discussed include Weber's least-cost model and the concept of agglomeration economies.
Metode Von Thunen menyatakan bahwa harga tanah ditentukan oleh jaraknya dari pusat kota. Model ini mengasumsikan kondisi homogen dan biaya angkut yang berbanding lurus dengan jarak. Harga tanah diprediksi menggunakan regresi linier sederhana antara harga dan jarak ke pusat kota.
There are several key factors that affect where industry chooses to locate, including accessibility to transportation for importing and exporting materials, a climate that attracts workers, availability of flat land and power, access to capital, communication links, government incentives, available labor supply, and access to markets. Industry classifications include primary industries dealing with raw materials, secondary industries involving manufacturing, tertiary industries providing services, and quaternary industries focused on research and development.
Alfred Weber developed the theory of location which assumed fixed centers of consumption and labor supply. The theory states that transportation costs and labor costs are the primary factors influencing the location of industries. According to Weber, industries will locate near raw material sources if the material index is greater than 1, and near markets if the material index is less than 1. The optimal location is the point where transportation costs and labor costs are minimized.
The Weber model of industrial location uses transportation costs to predict where industries will locate. It assumes firms face no risks and have identical production costs everywhere. Raw materials can be ubiquitous and found everywhere or localized in certain areas.
Weber developed diagrams to show least cost locations. A straight line diagram shows the location when one raw material is localized and one is ubiquitous. A triangular diagram shows when two raw materials are localized. Isotims represent lines of equal transportation costs, while isodapanes connect points of equal total transportation costs to determine the overall least cost location. Agglomeration economies, or savings from locating near other firms, are also considered.
The document discusses proposal writing and provides information on the purpose, types, qualities, and structure of proposals. Some key points:
- Proposals aim to obtain commercial contracts by persuading readers to accept an idea or plan. They can be written in response to a request or without one.
- Proposals should clearly explain what is being proposed, how it will be executed, the timeline, and costs. The goal is to educate and convince the reader to take the requested action.
- Proposals can be internal or external, solicited or unsolicited. Good proposals understand customer needs, specify clear scopes, and highlight benefits while managing risks.
- Proposals follow a basic structure of an
This document provides an executive summary and proposal from Word-for-Word Transcription Service for transcription services. It outlines the company's background and experience since 2001, including that transcription is done by a small group of expert linguists. It also provides references from past clients like Creative Transcriptions and the law firm Dunn & Martin LLP who were satisfied with the company's accurate and timely transcription work. The proposal highlights competitive pricing and the ability to take on the entire proposed project or portions of it.
There are four main theories of industrial location:
1) Weber's (1909) least cost theory, which states that industries locate where transportation costs of raw materials and finished products are minimized. This depends on whether the industry is weight gaining or weight losing.
2) Hotelling's (1929) theory of locational interdependence, which examines how demand impacts location as competitors try to capture market share in their locations.
3) Losch's (1939) theory of demand-oriented location, which focused on maximizing access to markets for finished goods.
4) Smith and Pred's (1971) profit-maximization theory examining how firms locate based on profit considerations.
This presentation was presented by me to explain the various factors affecting industries by taking the case study of Tata Steel, Gujarat and Punjab.
It was a part of the subject "Facilities Design" of Industrial Engineering at Thapar University, Patiala
A proposal is a marketing tool designed to convince readers to accept an offer to complete a project. Proposal writers must understand the needs of their audience and competitors to research problems and propose effective solutions. A successful proposal will follow conventions, demonstrate the writer's qualifications, and tell a story to fill a need, create desire, and solve problems for the client in an ethical manner.
The document proposes constructing a one-storey residential building to address the client's housing needs. It will include three bedrooms, two kitchens, and a porch. The building will cost approximately 1.15 million pesos to build and will solve the client's current problems of high rental costs and transportation expenses, while providing a comfortable living environment. Facility requirements like appliances, electricity, and water access are also addressed. The construction is proposed to alleviate the client's housing issues for many years.
This is no joke. If you're an entrepreneur and you have customers, then you need to forget everything you ever heard about target marketing and check out this SlideShare
This document discusses WordPress widgets and how they can be used. It explains that widgets can be placed in sidebars, footers, or tops of pages. It provides examples of default widgets like text and categories. It outlines how to add widgets by dragging and dropping them and how to save or remove widgets. Potential issues are also addressed, such as updates wiping widgets or migration difficulties.
The document discusses setting up a Google+ author profile and verifying it through Google Webmaster Tools to have author information displayed in search results. It recommends adding a profile photo, filling out profile information, and testing that rich snippets are being pulled from the profile. The assistant encourages completing the profile setup and verification to improve search visibility and increase website conversions.
The document provides recipes for healthy desserts made with Shakeology meal replacement powder. It includes recipes for sorbets, pies, no-bake cookies, bars, frozen pops, and mousse/pudding that use Shakeology, fruits, nuts, dairy alternatives and other wholesome ingredients. The recipes yield 2-10 servings each and provide instructions for preparation.
This document provides 30 recipes for Shakeology shakes using vanilla Shakeology powder. It lists the ingredients for each shake and encourages customization by suggesting alternatives like different milks or nut butters. The document emphasizes that the shakes provide tasty treats for every day of the month and that the taste tester loved and was sad when their shake was gone. It also provides instructions for making the shakes by blending the listed ingredients with vanilla Shakeology and ice.
Electronic Word of Mouth (EWOM) can provide Beachbody coaches with a professionally designed and managed website to promote their business. Key benefits include over 100 pages featuring Beachbody products with the coach's code, integration with social media platforms, search engine optimization (SEO) for increased traffic, and mobile responsiveness. Coaches can choose from templates or a fully customized design and their site will be maintained and secured by the hosting provider. This service aims to help coaches connect with more potential customers and build their business through an online presence.
This document collects information from a new patient, including their contact information, reason for visit, medical history, current medications, and insurance details. The patient is asked to provide details about their primary complaint, when it began, how it affects their daily life, previous treatments received, and any relevant past injuries, illnesses, or surgeries. They are also asked if they use tobacco or have been diagnosed with high blood pressure. The final sections collect their insurance and demographic information to process payments.
For just $399/year, you can rent over $1,000 worth of plugins and themes, get almost 100 pages of Beachbody product content with links and much more! Watch this presentation for more details.
Social media provides opportunities for businesses to share information and build customer relationships. It allows constant updates to reach customers directly. Done professionally, social media should create engaging content, regularly update followers, promptly respond to customers, monitor brand reputation, and encourage community sharing. Businesses must dedicate resources like employees or consultants to effectively manage a social media presence across multiple platforms.