Skip to content
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    1k Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    3 Posts
    941 Views
    zareenZ
    @zareen said in CS604 Assignment 3 Solution and Discussion: Question No 02 12 Marks Suppose a computer lab comprises of two printers, three scanners, and four ROM writers. There are three programs currently running on some computer. Assume program P1 is currently allocated a printer and two ROM writers and it is waiting for a scanner. Program P2 is allocated a scanner and it is waiting for a printer. Program P3 is allocated two ROM writers, a scanner, and a printer. Draw the corresponding resource allocation graph for these three programs. Also specify if the system is in a deadlocked state or not? [image: fEvrDBH.png] The system is not in deadlock state as it is clear from the above graph it is multi instance and circular weight.
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    285 Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    2 Posts
    762 Views
    zareenZ
    Solution: Introduction: The Indus Valley Civilization was one of the world’s first great urban civilizations. It flourished in the vast river plains and adjacent regions in Pakistan and western India. Although there were economic and cultural contacts between these early urban societies, significant differences are seen in their respective artistic styles, symbols, technologies and social organization. The Indus Valley Civilization is also the largest of the four other ancient civilizations of Mesopotamia, India, Egypt, and China. However, out of all these four ancient civilizations, least is known about the Indus Valley civilization. This is because of the fact that the script of Indus people has not been decoded yet. Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro were the two much planned civilized cities with similar planning technique, and layout in construction of this civilization. Living standard or town planning An Indus city was made of mud-brick buildings. It had walls and roads. Water was very important to Indus people, so the builders started by digging wells, and laying drains. Main streets were up to 10 meters wide, wide enough for carts to pass. Side streets were narrow, more like alleys. Houses were built with standardized baked bricks and many had spacious courtyards. Some of the bigger houses even had multiple stories (levels) and paved floors. Some cities had a citadel high on a mound. In the citadel were bigger buildings. Perhaps the city’s rulers lived there. Most people lived and worked in the lower part of town. Most Indus people did not live in cities at all. Perhaps 9 out of 10 people were farmers and traders who lived in small villages. Art and craft This ancient civilization had marvelous craftsmen, skilled in pottery, weaving, and metal working. The pottery that has been found is of very high quality with beautiful designs. They have found bowls made of bronze and silver, and many beads and ornaments. Various sculptures, seals, pottery, gold jewelry and bronze have been found at excavation sites. Trade and Economy Indus Valley civilization was mainly an urban culture sustained by surplus agricultural production and commerce, the latter including trade. It was facilitated by major advances in transport technology. Aside from the subsistence of agriculture and hunting, the Indus people supported themselves by trading goods. Through trade, the Indus Civilization expanded its culture, coming into regular contacts with faraway lands. Water and irrigation system Remains from the ancient city of Harappa and Mohenjo-Daro show that the city used to have a well designed and proper water drainage and irrigation systems. Farmers made good use of water from the rivers. They were probably the first farmers to take water from underground wells. They may have used river water to irrigate their fields. Language The language is not directly attested and its affiliation is uncertain. The main body of writing dated from the Indus Civilization is in the form of some two thousand inscribed seals in good, legible conditions. These seals and samples of Indus writing have been floating around the scholastic. So contention for being the language of the Indus civilization is dim. The Harappan people were literate and used to Dravidian language. Only part of this language has been deciphered today, leaving numerous questions about this civilization unanswered. Conclusion: Although Indus Valley civilization has its importance, but we may not know anything more about this civilization, the reason is this language does not exist anymore. The historians, the scholars and generally for all of us, this leads to acknowledge of an important civilization, which was the basis for several features of the current lifestyle. It was this rigorous devotion to craftsmanship and trade that allowed the Harappan culture to spread widely and prosper greatly. References: Ancientscripts Bizland Timemaps Wikipedia Wikipedia
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    299 Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    2 Posts
    1k Views
    zareenZ
    Solution: Sr. No. Scenarios Identification 1*5 Justification 3*5 1. Sara during the first year of her life feels pleasure that centers on the mouth. Things such as chewing, sucking, and biting are the sources of pleasure that reduces her anxiety. Oral This occurs during the first year of life and the erogenous zone during this stage is the mouth. At this stage, pleasures mainly come from mouth. According to Freud, an adult who is fixated at the early oral stage will engage in abundance of oral activities such as eating, drinking, or smoking. This person also will engage in activities that are symbolically equivalent to those oral activities such as collecting things, being a good listener etc. 2. During second year of life, Shazia feels pleasure on bowel and bladder elimination. The control she learns to exert over her bodily functions is manifested in toilet-training. Anal It starts during the second year of life, and the erogenous zone is the anus- buttocks region. It is the stage when the child has to gain control over his physiological processes so that they function in accordance with the demands of the society i.e. the child must be toilet trained. Fixation at this stage may result in physical problems. 3. Ali during the age span of 3 to 5 years feels pleasure for the genitals and coping with incestuous sexual feelings for his mother. He wants to possess his mother exclusively and get rid of his father to enable him to do so. On the other hand, Sana during 3 to 5 years of her age feels sexual attraction towards her father and hatred feelings towards her mother. Phallic This starts from the third year of life to about fifth year, and the erogenous area are the genital area. This is one of the most complicated and controversial of Freud’s stages. It is the stage of Oedipus and Electra complexes, the resolution of which has profound influence on an adult’s life. The male child experiences the Oedipus complex and the female experience Electra complex. 4. At the fifth to twelfth years of age, Ahmad feels that his sexuality is repressed into unconscious and he started focusing to identify himself with the same sex parent and interacts with same sex peers. Latency It lasts from about sixth year to about twelfth year. Here the sexual interests are displaced to substitute activities such as learning, athletics, and peer group activities. 5. When Rashid reached at the age of puberty, he feels that he reaches the physical sexual maturity and the genitals become the primary focus of pleasurable sensations, which he seeks to satisfy in the heterosexual relationships. Genital It is the final stage of development that occurs following puberty. It is the time at which the person emerges from pre genital stages as the adults as he/ she destined to become. Now the child has become a socialized adult with heterosexual interests leading to marriage and child- rearing. If, however, the experiences during the pre-genital stages cause fixation, they will manifests themselves throughout one’s adult life.
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    244 Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    296 Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    2 Posts
    979 Views
    zareenZ
    Solution: Ethical Problem Solving Paradigm Each person may weigh the ethical arguments differently. But a systematic approach can clarify complex situations and help us to come to an answer that represents people striving to be their best. This method, of course, does not provide an automatic solution to moral problems. It is not meant to. The method is merely meant to help identify most of the important ethical considerations. In the end, we must deliberate on moral issues for ourselves, keeping a careful eye on both the facts and on the ethical considerations. Below you are given a more detailed outlined for analyzing ethical dilemmas: Define the Problem. What is the ethical dilemma? Gather the Necessary Facts. List Possible Alternative Solutions. Analyze the Consequences of Each Alternative. Recommend a Plan of Action. In summary, consciously thinking through these ethical approaches can improve our understanding and our decisions. But it does not guarantee unambiguous answers. It’s possible that the choice suggested by one approach may conflict with that suggested by another. You are required to do analysis of mentioned morning show on the basis of following points: Define the Problem. What is the ethical dilemma? Mention the useless issues here and explain the ethics related to the content. (Focus on skin color, exaggeration of fights among family members) Gather the Necessary Facts. Describe the examples from the shows to monitor the facts’ presentation. List Possible Alternative Solutions. Give the alternative topics that can be discussed in the morning shows to make it fruitful. Analyze the Consequences of Each Alternative. Mention the draw backs and complexes associated with the program content. Recommend a Plan of Action. Provide feasible recommendations that can improve the morning shows.
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    529 Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    2 Posts
    785 Views
    zareenZ
    Solution: Guidelines Following points would be considered while making solution regarding the focus of the media hegemony theory of foreign news agencies and news channels on our news channels regarding dissemination of national information: Gramsci’s conception of hegemony is rooted in the notion that the dominant social group in a society has the capacity to exercise intellectual and moral direction over society at large and to build a new system of social alliances to support its aims. Gramsci argued that military force was not necessarily the best instrument to retain power for the ruling classes, but that a more effective way of wielding power was to build consent by ideological control of cultural production and distribution. According to Gramsci, such a system exists when a dominant social class exerts moral and intellectual leadership - through its control of such institutions as schools, religious bodies and the mass media - over both allied and subordinate classes. Social and intellectual authority is exercised by the government ‘with the consent of the governed - but with this consent organized, and not generic and vague’ in such a fashion that its right to govern is rarely challenged seriously. The ‘state does have and request consent but it also “educates” this consent’. One of the most important functions of the state, Gramsci wrote in his Prison Notebooks, ‘is to raise the great mass of the population to a particular cultural and moral level, a level (or type) which corresponds to the needs of the productive forces for development, and hence to the interests of the ruling classes’. Schools, courts and a multitude of ‘initiatives and activities … form the apparatus of the political and cultural hegemony of the ruling classes’. This, he argued, was in contrast with a situation in which the dominant class merely rules, that is, coercively imposes its will on subordinate classes. This consent thus manufactured, however, cannot simply be assumed or guaranteed and has to be renewed, indicating that hegemony is more of a process - which is to be continually reproduced, secured and lost - rather than an achieved state of affairs. The notion of hegemony is widely used to conceptualize political functions of the mass media, as a key player in propagating and maintaining the dominant ideology and also to explain the process of media and communication production, with dominant ideology shaping production of news and entertainment. Thus, though the media are notionally free from direct government control, yet they act as agents of legitimization of the dominant ideology. The communication channels and news agencies of developing countries are dependent on foreign content/ developed nations’ information. So foreign content influenced the channels of developing countries. Media hegemony established through the control on information.
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    342 Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    2 Posts
    768 Views
    zareenZ
    Sol Idea: Assignment No.1 MCM-517 Q.1 Answer It is a fact that floating ads captures audience attention, advertisers can use eye catching imagery or visually engaging graphics and content for higher click through rates. This kind of advertisement have proven to increase the brand exposure. They can be seen by large number of people. Advertiser can also reach or target the specific audience for whom the ad has been positioned. They have proven to be more memorable and also have tracking capabilities. But there are also drawbacks of this kind of online advertisement: as you may have also experienced that while watching a drama/movie/political talk show, we get irritated by the floating ads which requires minimum 5 seconds for skipping. The other drawback is that user can add ad blocking tools in their web browser to stop seeing the ads. But this kind of online advertisement have proven to increase the brand awareness and also the sales. Q.2 Answer Online journalist has to be very careful in gathering the information from sources. There are many problems that online journalist has to face in gathering and reporting the information like unreliable sources, inaccurate information, manipulation of data, fairness and balance etc. It has been seen that online reporters take less time to check their stories. They struggle with credibility and also objective reporting. Online journalist has to be more careful than journalist working in print and electronic media because of above mentioned problems. Online journalist should not report the news story in a hurry just to get higher clicks and more traffic to their respective organization’s websites. The other big challenge is the role of gatekeepers; in online medium the role of responsible media professionals has become more important as it is disappearing day by day in online medium. The information is not filtered before it comes to public which has very bad effects on society.
  • 0 Votes
    1 Posts
    237 Views
    No one has replied
  • 0 Votes
    4 Posts
    1k Views
    S
    @zareen ![image: mlmFi3g.jpg] This is the assignment #3 of cs204. Please give me the solution asap. Thanks
  • 0 Votes
    2 Posts
    451 Views
    cyberianC
    Solution was required in following manner: Mid-Week magazine of Jang media group and published 26, Sep, 2018. Selected interview was Informative + Personality based. Interview was conducted in “Group Session” form. (well-known film celebrities “Hina dilpazeer and Jan rambo) Nature of questions were “open ended, probe questions, loaded and leading questions” asked by the interviewee. The conclusion of this interview was suggestive. Both celebrities discuss the current situation of film industry in Pakistan and share some guidelines for the betterment and improvement of the Pakistani film industry.
Reputation Earning
How to Build a $1,000/Month World CUP LIVE Matches Live Cricket Streaming
Ads
File Sharing
Stats

1

Online

3.0k

Users

2.8k

Topics

8.5k

Posts
Popular Tags
Online User
| |