What is the difference between Baseline and Approved?
In Project Management,and Configuration Management, what is the difference between a Baselined document and an Approved document?Answers: This might vary for a moment between organizations depending on their exact definition. However, in most cases the baseline document would probably be the first approved altered copy of the document - probably version 1. The "approved" document would probably refer the currently approved journal of the document. If the document hasn't been changed, consequently this would still be the baseline version. However, the approved reworked copy could now be publication 1,2,3.
If there's been more than one reworked copy of the document then presumably the most recent approved release would be the "approved" version you'd use. If you needed to know how the document had changed, you could compare it to the inventive baseline document.
How much is 10 percent of 12,500?
Answers: 1250.. 12500 / 10 = 1250
12,500 x 0.10= 1250
1250 is your answer.
You need some basic help on percentages here. One percent is one hundredth. So any percentage is the result of multiplication by the percentage in question - ten in your example - and division by one hundred.
Good luck.
If I purchase something from Amazon.com France, Will My U.S. Credit Card Company Convert The Currency?
In other words, will they take guardianship of the currency conversion from dollars>>Euros (and vice versa for my statement) so I can still purchase an item like I would from the U.S. Amazon website?Answers: I work for Bank of America and foreign transactions are automatically converted into US dollars on the customers statement. We don't even see the transaction contained by foreign currency, its usually converted by (depending on what type of card you're using) Visa International, MasterCard or Amex's processing system. All US banks computer systems operate using dollars as the monetary component. If a transaction doesn't come through converted, it usually gets rejected because the system doesn't spot the format.
Yes, plus a fee, which will be almost nominal.