Concept explainers
Life Insurance:
Life insurance is a contract between the person who is the insurance policy holder and an insurer in which the insurer is liable to pay a beneficiary of sum of money upon the death of the insured person in exchange for premium payments. These are generally underwritten using a person’s medical status at the time of applying.
Life Insurance Underwriting:
Life Insurance Underwriting is a process in which the insurance policy holder shares his or her medical data continually with the insurer and the insurer will price policy for continuously for participating customers.
Automobile Insurance:
Automobile Insurance is a contract between the person who is the insurance policy holder for his or her automobile and an insurer in which the insurer is liable to pay a beneficiary of sum of money in case of accident or theft of the automobile in exchange for premium payments.
Usage based Automobile Insurance:
Usage based automobile insurance is also known as pay as you drive in which the costs of the premium are dependent on type of vehicle, distance, accident records and measured against time.
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Introduction to Information Systems
- EX:[AE00]=fa50h number of ones =1111 1010 0101 0000 Physical address=4AE00h=4000h*10h+AE00h Mov ax,4000 Mov ds,ax; DS=4000h mov ds,4000 X Mov ax,[AE00] ; ax=[ae00]=FA50h Mov cx,10; 16 bit in decimal Mov bl,0 *: Ror ax,1 Jnc ** Inc bl **:Dec cx Jnz * ;LSB⇒CF Cf=1 ; it jump when CF=0, will not jump when CF=1 HW1: rewrite the above example use another wayarrow_forwardEX2: Write a piece of assembly code that can count the number of ones in word stored at 4AE00harrow_forwardWrite a program that simulates a Magic 8 Ball, which is a fortune-telling toy that displays a random response to a yes or no question. In the student sample programs for this book, you will find a text file named 8_ball_responses.txt. The file contains 12 responses, such as “I don’t think so”, “Yes, of course!”, “I’m not sure”, and so forth. The program should read the responses from the file into a list. It should prompt the user to ask a question, then display one of the responses, randomly selected from the list. The program should repeat until the user is ready to quit. Contents of 8_ball_responses.txt: Yes, of course! Without a doubt, yes. You can count on it. For sure! Ask me later. I'm not sure. I can't tell you right now. I'll tell you after my nap. No way! I don't think so. Without a doubt, no. The answer is clearly NO. (You can access the Computer Science Portal at www.pearsonhighered.com/gaddis.)arrow_forward
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