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36 votes
Use the chart and your knowledge to answer the question that follows.

Which best shows how Egypt became an empire?
Box with three timelines labeled with letters. Timeline A reads, Ahmose I drives out the Hyksos and establishes a New Kingdom, Pharaohs use new military technology to conquer most of Syria, New wealth allows Egypt to conquer Libya and Nubia. Timeline B reads, The Hyksos defeat the Egyptians, The Middle Kingdom grows prosperous from trade, New Kingdom pharaohs conquer new territory. Timeline C reads, Pharaohs use new military technology to conquer most of Syria, Hyksos kings rule much of Eqypt for about a hundred years, The Middle Kingdom grows prosperous from trade.


Responses

A
A

B
B

C

Use the chart and your knowledge to answer the question that follows. Which best shows-example-1
User JMS
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2 Answers

21 votes
21 votes

Answer: Setting separator pages, or banners if you prefer NetWare terminology, can be tedious work, but in very busy printing environments producing substantial documents, they are essential.

Separator pages separate jobs. They also can be used to provide information about jobs and can print at the beginning of each print job, in front of the first page. They don't affect the printing order of the jobs or pagination. Consider the following key reasons for using separator pages:

♦ Tracking down job owners. We had several high-end printers which many people printed every day. At the end of each day, hundreds of documents were forgotten by their owners. At the end of the week, a huge pile of uncollected documents was getting thrown out (Web pages, white papers, press releases, e-mail, and so on). The situation got worse by the day, and it didn't take long to recognize the waste of time and materials. The situation called for separator pages, to enable a printer administrator to collect the jobs, identify the owners, and threaten them with disciplinary action if they did not collect their output. Habitual offenders were told they needed to clean up their act or they would lose their printing privileges.

♦ Separating the print jobs in long runs. If your printer is receiving large volumes of print runs or continuous reports, the only way to pull complete jobs from the run or sort them easily is with separator pages. We have several printers that typically print reports on a round-the-clock basis, and all the jobs are separated by separator pages.

♦ Organizing chaos at high-traffic printers. After printing, many job owners dash off to the printer and wait for the paper to slide out of the hopper. If the printer is busy printing, eager beavers grab every freshly printed page, collecting pages and even whole jobs before other users can get to them. Meanwhile, uncollected jobs are stored in the pickup tray, and if separator pages don't exist, it doesn't take long to create job mayhem.

♦ Job information. Separator pages can be used with sophisticated printers to print job information, such as the owner, the language used (if the printer supports language changing on the fly), and so on.

Windows Server 2003 provides four types of separator page files, stored in the systemroot\ System32 folder. Table 28-1 describes these pages.

Explanation: that's what I got on it

User Cjorssen
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23 votes
23 votes

Answer: It is A

Step-by-step explanation:

I took the test

User Daniel Guillamot
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