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MGT 533

RESEARCH METHODOLOGY

COMPARISON BETWEEN TWO


JOURNALS
(CO-MOVEMENT IN STOCK
MARKET)

PREPARED FOR:
PROF.MADYA NORAINI AMINUDDIN

PREPARED BY:
ADDAWIYAH BINTI SAAD @ ELIAS
2007136813
BMB 3AB

The Best Public Speaker

By Bamers - Posted on October 6th, 2007

Tagged: Debates • democrats • GOP • presendential election 2008 • presidential

debate • public speaking • Effective government • Better future

The next GOP debate is being held on Tuesday. Yours truly finagled her
way into a ticket to this event attended by 1200 people. Being able to
witness firsthand a Presidential debate, even though it is just the
primaries, has made me start really thinking about the repercussions of
the debates and the fairness of them.

I've kind of noticed during the first couple debates, the "front runners" got
a considerable more amount of face time then the second-tier candidates.
This really bothers me and is just another example of how the media
influences the choice of our president.

Do people really pay attention to the debates? I usually just watch the
debates to either make fun of candidates or to cheer my candidate on. I
venture that many people who watch the debates are already decided in
their votes. Many candidates hold debate watching parties and field
directors encourage people in their districts to do the same. Obviously, if
you hold a debate party for Rudi Giulani or Mitt Romney, you are probably
solid in your decision to vote for the man.

Aren't debates supposed to inform people of the candidates’ positions? If


people who are already decided watch the debate, isn't that defeating the
purpose? The debates seem to be just full of talking points and mindless
rhetoric, the same thing over and over, debate after debate. It does
nothing to propel candidates forward, except for GOP candidate Ron Paul
who is an exception to every rule.

Debates are won by the best public speaker, not the person with the best
ideas and facts. I've seen it happen before. In Michigan's 2008
Gubernatorial debates, Governor Jennifer Granholm consistently out did
the GOP candidate, Dick DeVos. Granholm graduated from Harvard Law
School and DeVos was a businessman. Obviously, she would have better
speaking skills then DeVos, but DeVos's ideas were head over heels better
then Granholm's. Alas, he lost the debates and the elections and look
where Michigan is now with higher taxes and horrendous budgets.

I will enjoy the debate Tuesday because it's a once in a lifetime


opportunity for a 17-year old, I hope there are many more in my future to
attend and that maybe, one day, I'll be able to stand up at one of the
podiums and offer my ideas to the American people, ideas that are new
and progressive. Until then, we all must do our best to be informed and
inform others of the facts, not rhetoric, so the next President might be the
best person for America, not the best public speaker.
TABLE OF CONTENT

No Content pages
1 Abstract 1
2 Introduction 1
3 Background 3
4 Literature Review 3
5 Data 5
6 Methodology 5
7 Keywords 5
8 Authors 6
9 Time Period 6
10 Conclusion 6
11 References 7
12 Similarities 9
13 Summary 10
Appendix
Revolutions per minute
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
"RPM" redirects here. For other uses, see Rpm (disambiguation).
For other uses, see Revolutions per minute (disambiguation).

Revolutions Per Minute (abbreviated rpm, RPM, r/min, or r·min−1)


is a unit of frequency: the number of full rotations completed in one
minute around a fixed axis. It is most commonly used as a measure
of rotational speed or angular velocity of some mechanical
component.

Standards organizations generally recommend the symbol r/min,


which is more consistent with the general use of unit symbols. This
is not enforced as an international standard; in French, for example,
tr/mn (tours par minute) is commonly used.

The corresponding International System of Units (SI) unit would be


the hertz and we have:
1 r/min = (1/60) revolutions per second = 0.01666667 Hz

In the SI one often uses the unit for angular velocity which is
radians per second (rad·s−1):
1 r/min = 2π rad·min−1 = 2π/60 rad·s−1 = 0.10471976 rad·s−1

[edit] Examples
Main article: Orders of magnitude (angular velocity)

• On some kinds of disc or tape-like recording media, the rotational


speed of the medium under the read head is a standard given in r/min.
Gramophone (phonograph) records, for example, typically rotate
steadily at 16, 33⅓, 45 or 78 r/min.
• Modern dental drills can rotate at up to 500,000 r/min.
• The second hand of a conventional analogue clock rotates at 1 r/min.
• Audio CD players read their discs at a constant 150KB/s and thus must
vary the disc's rotational speed from around 500 r/min when reading at
the innermost edge, and 180 r/min at the outer edge. CD-ROM drives
have their maximum rotational speeds are rated in multiples of this
figure, even though they do not hold to constant read speeds when
reading from data tracks.
• A washing machine's drum may rotate at 500 to 1800 r/min during the
spin cycles.
• An automobile's engine typically varies between 700 and 7000 r/min
(though there are certain cars that can rev as high as 11,000 r/min.
• A piston aircraft engine typically rotates between 2000 and 3000 r/min.
• A computer's hard drive rotates at 3600, 4200, 5400, or 7200 r/min on
IDE types and 10,000 or 15,000 r/min on some SATA and SCSI and
Fibre Channel drives.
• The engine of a Formula One racing car can reach 20,000 r/min under
some circumstances.[1]
• A Zippe-type centrifuge for enriching uranium spins at 90,000 r/min or
faster.[2]
• Gas turbine engines rotate at tens of thousands of r/min. JetCat model
aircraft turbines are capable of over 100,000 r/min with the fastest
reaching 165,000 r/min.[3]

• An electromechanical battery (EMB) works at 60,000 - 200,000 rpm


range using a passively magnetic levitated flywheel in vacuum[4]. The
choice of the flywheel material is not the most dense, but the one that
pulverises the most safely, at surface speeds about 7 times the speed
of sound.

• A turbocharger can reach 290,000 r/min while 80,000 - 200,000 r/min


are common.

[edit] See also

• Orders of magnitude (angular velocity)


• Constant linear velocity, or CLV, used when referring to the speed of
audio CDs
• Constant angular velocity, or CAV, used when referring to the speed of
gramophone (phonograph) records
• Turn (geometry)

[edit] References

1. ^ FIA on Formula One Engines. FIA.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-11.


2. ^ Slender and Elegant, It Fuels the Bomb. electricityforum.com. Retrieved on
2006-09-24.
3. ^ JetCat P-60 turbine specification page. jetcat.com. Retrieved on 2006-07-
19.
4. ^ original paper. llnl.gov.

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolutions_per_minute"


Categories: Units of frequency

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