Read the cases of E&H Cruises vs. Baker on page 66 and Kroger Stores vs. Walters on page 74 of the textbook and discuss precedents created by each respective case

In 2018, Nordstrom purchased two tech companies (LINK to article). You are Nordstrom’s Chief Tech Officer, give us some insight to how the acquisitions will improve the customer experience. Do you plan to aggressively move to incorporate technology such as AI and AR? Provide example. Link to article, https://www.retaildive.com/news/nordstrom-snaps-up-tech-startups-to-fuel-mobile-shopping/518773/
3 questions to be answered must be 1 paragraph per question.
There are a different set of skill set needed to be a global leader vs a local leader. In your assessment, what are those differences?
Can a manager who only has experience in one local area be groomed to be a global leader?
Give your rationale for either or?
The learning outcome for this unit involves the process of developing an information system (IS) for an organization. There are many factors involved in this process, including core activities and the methodologies for managing the process. Project management plays a part as well. Additionally, IS development does not happen in a silo; there is also the business side to consider as part of the process. All of these considerations are brought together and addressed in this assignment.
Assignment Instructions:
For this assignment, you will need to access the CSU Online Library to research two articles concerning information systems development and project management. Drawing on these two articles, your textbook, and other sources, write an essay that addresses the following:
Relevance of diversity strategy while securing any set of national assets. Diversity in national infrastructure involves the introduction of intentional differences into systems such as vendor source, deployment approach, network connectivity, targeted standards, programming language, operating system, and software version. Two systems are considered diverse if their key attributes differ, and nondiverse otherwise. The requirement for physical diversity in the design of computing infrastructure is perhaps the most familiar of all diversity-related issues. The idea is that any computing or networking asset that serves as an essential component of some critical function must include physical distribution to increase its survivability. A national diversity program should be developed that would call for coordination between companies and governmental agencies in several .
how the types of threats discussed in the below article could impact our economy, and how implementing Diversity (as discussed in the attachment) could help mitigate these threats?
Evolutionary theory is often invoked to explain gender differences in mate selection. If the motive to reproduce explains men’s attraction to young (pretty) women and women’s attraction to financially stable men—as evolutionary psychologists claim—then how does it explain the increasing number of women who do not depend on men for financial stability because they are themselves economically independent?
Or, how does one explain the increasing number of women who choose not to have children? If they do not plan to have children, then they certainly do not need a financially stable mate committed to the long-term care of offspring they do not intend to have. Or, how can evolutionary theory explain the increasing number of women who are not married yet have children?
For this Discussion, you will examine conditions that influence diffusion of responsibility from the perspective of mate selection.
Post whether or not the rules of attraction change for women as a function of their economic independence. Explain whether or not the rules of attraction are biological imperatives or cultural constructions, or both. Please use social psychology theory to refute claims based on evolutionary theory.
1.What is a logit and how do we compute class probabilities from the logit?
2.Compare and contrast linear and logistic regression methods.
3.Let x3 be the following vector:
x3 <- c(0, 1, 1, 2, 2, 2, 3, 3, 4)
Imagine what a histogram of x3 would look like. Assume that the histogram has a bin width of 1. How many bars will the histogram have? Where will they appear? How high will each be?