EBK COMPUTER SCIENCE
13th Edition
ISBN: 8220106892572
Author: BRYLOW
Publisher: PEARSON
expand_more
expand_more
format_list_bulleted
Expert Solution & Answer
Chapter 9, Problem 9SI
Explanation of Solution
Effects of internet and
Internet and database technology cause several alterations in libraries and affect the libraries as:
- Number of visitors in libraries decreases with the increment in the popularity of internet.
- Less popularity to libraries due to internet and database technology.
In spite of these facts, the libraries are still better than the internet and database technology due to the various reasons such as:
- Quality control in internet is not maintained.
- Internet causes several threats, security risks and theft of personal data.
- Spending more time on internet causes strain vision.
- Not everything accessible on the internet is protected.
- High costs of internet facilities.
- Not everyone uses and knows electronics and computers.
- Not everything is available at one place.
- Children are more vulnerable to cyber attack due to less knowledge of database technology.
Until now libraries are better for humans than internet and database technologies due to cybercrimes and several other but further developments of internet facilities and database technologies can match the effectiveness of libraries...
Expert Solution & Answer
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionStudents have asked these similar questions
15 points
Save ARS
Consider the following scenario in which host 10.0.0.1 is communicating with an external SMTP mail server at IP
address 128.119.40.186.
NAT translation table
WAN side addr
LAN side addr
(c), 5051
(d), 3031
S: (e),5051
SMTP
B
D (f.(g)
10.0.0.4
server
138.76.29.7
128.119.40.186
(a) is the source IP address at A, and its value.
S: (a),3031
D: (b), 25
10.0.0.1
A
10.0.0.2.
1. 138.76.29.7
10.0.0.3
6.3A-3. Multiple Access protocols (3). Consider the figure below, which shows the arrival of 6
messages for transmission at different multiple access wireless nodes at times t=0.1, 1.4, 1.8, 3.2,
3.3, 4.1. Each transmission requires exactly one time unit.
1
t=0.0
2
3
45
t=1.0
t-2.0
t-3.0
6
t=4.0
t-5.0
For the CSMA protocol (without collision detection), indicate which packets are successfully
transmitted. You should assume that it takes .2 time units for a signal to propagate from one node to
each of the other nodes. You can assume that if a packet experiences a collision or senses the
channel busy, then that node will not attempt a retransmission of that packet until sometime after
t=5. Hint: consider propagation times carefully here. (Note: You can find more examples of problems similar to this here B.]
☐
U
ப
5
-
3
1
4
6
2
Just wanted to know, if you had a scene graph, how do you get multiple components from a specific scene node within a scene graph? Like if I wanted to get a component from wheel from the scene graph, does that require traversing still?
Like if a physics component requires a transform component and these two component are part of the same scene node. How does the physics component knows how to get the scene object's transform it is attached to, this being in a scene graph?
Chapter 9 Solutions
EBK COMPUTER SCIENCE
Ch. 9.1 - Identify two departments in a manufacturing plant...Ch. 9.1 - Prob. 2QECh. 9.1 - Summarize the roles of the application software...Ch. 9.2 - Prob. 1QECh. 9.2 - Prob. 2QECh. 9.2 - Prob. 4QECh. 9.2 - Prob. 5QECh. 9.2 - Prob. 6QECh. 9.3 - Prob. 1QECh. 9.3 - What is a persistent object?
Ch. 9.3 - Identify some classes as well as some of their...Ch. 9.3 - Prob. 4QECh. 9.4 - Prob. 1QECh. 9.4 - Prob. 2QECh. 9.4 - Prob. 3QECh. 9.4 - Prob. 4QECh. 9.4 - Prob. 5QECh. 9.4 - Prob. 6QECh. 9.5 - Prob. 1QECh. 9.5 - Prob. 2QECh. 9.5 - Prob. 3QECh. 9.5 - Prob. 4QECh. 9.5 - Prob. 5QECh. 9.5 - Prob. 6QECh. 9.5 - Prob. 7QECh. 9.6 - Prob. 1QECh. 9.6 - Give an additional example of a pattern that might...Ch. 9.6 - Prob. 3QECh. 9.6 - How does data mining differ from traditional...Ch. 9.7 - Prob. 1QECh. 9.7 - Prob. 2QECh. 9.7 - Prob. 3QECh. 9.7 - Prob. 4QECh. 9 - Prob. 1CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 2CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 3CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 4CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 5CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 6CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 7CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 8CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 9CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 10CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 11CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 12CRPCh. 9 - Using the commands SELECT, PROJECT, and JOIN,...Ch. 9 - Answer Problem 13 using SQL. PROBLEM 13 13. Using...Ch. 9 - Prob. 15CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 16CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 17CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 18CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 19CRPCh. 9 - Empl Id Name Address SSN Job Id Job Title Skill...Ch. 9 - Empl Id Name Address SSN Job Id Job Title Skill...Ch. 9 - Prob. 22CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 23CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 24CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 25CRPCh. 9 - Write a sequence of instructions (using the...Ch. 9 - Prob. 27CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 28CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 29CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 30CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 31CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 32CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 33CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 34CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 35CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 36CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 37CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 38CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 39CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 40CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 41CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 42CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 43CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 44CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 45CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 46CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 47CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 48CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 49CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 50CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 51CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 52CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 53CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 54CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 55CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 56CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 57CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 58CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 59CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 60CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 61CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 62CRPCh. 9 - Prob. 1SICh. 9 - Prob. 2SICh. 9 - Prob. 3SICh. 9 - Prob. 4SICh. 9 - Prob. 5SICh. 9 - Prob. 6SICh. 9 - Prob. 7SICh. 9 - Prob. 8SICh. 9 - Prob. 9SICh. 9 - Prob. 10SI
Knowledge Booster
Similar questions
- How to develop a C program that receives the message sent by the provided program and displays the name and email included in the message on the screen?Here is the code of the program that sends the message for reference: typedef struct { long tipo; struct { char nome[50]; char email[40]; } dados;} MsgStruct; int main() { int msg_id, status; msg_id = msgget(1000, 0600 | IPC_CREAT); exit_on_error(msg_id, "Creation/Connection"); MsgStruct msg; msg.tipo = 5; strcpy(msg.dados.nome, "Pedro Silva"); strcpy(msg.dados.email, "pedro@sapo.pt"); status = msgsnd(msg_id, &msg, sizeof(msg.dados), 0); exit_on_error(status, "Send"); printf("Message sent!\n");}arrow_forward9. Let L₁=L(ab*aa), L₂=L(a*bba*). Find a regular expression for (L₁ UL2)*L2. 10. Show that the language is not regular. L= {a":n≥1} 11. Show a derivation tree for the string aabbbb with the grammar S→ABλ, A→aB, B→Sb. Give a verbal description of the language generated by this grammar.arrow_forward14. Show that the language L= {wna (w) < Nь (w) < Nc (w)} is not context free.arrow_forward
- 7. What language is accepted by the following generalized transition graph? a+b a+b* a a+b+c a+b 8. Construct a right-linear grammar for the language L ((aaab*ab)*).arrow_forward5. Find an nfa with three states that accepts the language L = {a^ : n≥1} U {b³a* : m≥0, k≥0}. 6. Find a regular expression for L = {vwv: v, wЄ {a, b}*, |v|≤4}.arrow_forward15. The below figure (sequence of moves) shows several stages of the process for a simple initial configuration. 90 a a 90 b a 90 91 b b b b Represent the action of the Turing machine (a) move from one configuration to another, and also (b) represent in the form of arbitrary number of moves.arrow_forward
- 12. Eliminate useless productions from Sa aA BC, AaBλ, B→ Aa, C CCD, D→ ddd Cd. Also, eliminate all unit-productions from the grammar. 13. Construct an npda that accepts the language L = {a"b":n≥0,n‡m}.arrow_forwardYou are given a rope of length n meters and scissors that can cut the rope into any two pieces. For simplification, only consider cutting the rope at an integer position by the meter metric. Each cut has a cost associated with it, c(m), which is the cost of cutting the rope at position m. (You can call c(m) at any time to return the cost value.) The goal is to cut the rope into k smaller pieces, minimizing the total cost of cutting. B Provide the pseudo-code of your dynamic programming algorithm f(n,k) that will return the minimum cost of cutting the rope of length n into k pieces. Briefly explain your algorithm. What is the benefit of using dynamic programming for this problem? What are the key principles of dynamic programming used in your algorithm?arrow_forwardDetermine whether each of the problems below is NP-Complete or P A. 3-SAT B. Traveling Salesman Problem C. Minimum Spanning Tree D. Checking if a positive integer is prime or not. E. Given a set of linear inequalities with integer variables, finding a set of values for the variables that satisfies all inequalities and maximizes or minimizes a given linear objective function.arrow_forward
- 1. Based on our lecture on NP-Complete, can an NP-Complete problem not have a polynomial-time algorithm? Explain your answer. 2. Prove the conjecture that if any problem in NP is not polynomial-time solvable, then no NP-Complete problem is polynomial-time solvable. (You can't use Theorem 1 and 2 directly) 3. After you complete your proof in b), discuss how this conjecture can be used to solve the problem of whether P=NP.arrow_forwardBased on our lectures and the BELLMAN-FORD algorithm below, answer the following questions. BELLMAN-FORD (G, w, s) 1 INITIALIZE-SINGLE-SOURCE (G, s) 2 for i = 1 to |G. VI - 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 for each edge (u, v) = G.E RELAX(u, v, w) for each edge (u, v) = G.E if v.d> u.d+w(u, v) return FALSE return TRUE 1. What does the algorithm return? 2. Analyze the complexity of the algorithm.arrow_forward(Short-answer) b. Continue from the previous question. Suppose part of the data you extracted from the data warehouse is the following. Identify the missing values you think exist in the dataset. Use Column letter and Row number to refer to each missing value in the dataset. Please write down how you want to address each particular missing value (you can group them if they receive same treatment). For imputation, you do not need to calculate the exact imputed values but just describe what kind of value you want to use to impute.arrow_forward
arrow_back_ios
SEE MORE QUESTIONS
arrow_forward_ios
Recommended textbooks for you
- Principles of Information Systems (MindTap Course...Computer ScienceISBN:9781305971776Author:Ralph Stair, George ReynoldsPublisher:Cengage Learning
Principles of Information Systems (MindTap Course...
Computer Science
ISBN:9781305971776
Author:Ralph Stair, George Reynolds
Publisher:Cengage Learning