They were too large and expensive for personal use.
Business demand was so high that they were not available for personal use.
Congress approved them for government and military use only.
Computers didn't have an impact on everyday life in the 1950s because they were too large and expensive for personal use.
Before the introduction of the microprocessor in the early 1970s, computers were generally large and expensive systems owned by large corporations, universities, government agencies, and similarly sized institutions. The end users generally did not interact directly with the machine, but rather prepared tasks for the computer, in off-line equipment such as card punches. Several assignments for the computer would be collected and processed in batches. After the work was over, users could pick up the results. In some cases it could take hours or days between submitting a job to the computer center and receiving the output.
Answer:
C) certificates sold by the church that reduced or canceled a punishment for a sin.
Explanation:
In an effort to raise money to build churches and monasteries, the Catholic Church would sell indulgences, in which they were certificates that help "pay" for any sin that was committed before, and would be a way for a person to go to heaven.
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Answer: The answer is c obviously.
Explanation:
The steam engine allowed factories to produce enough goods that businesses initiated seeking out foreign markets. It allowed for larger and bigger machines to be used.
Globalization became faster in the nineteenth century as a result of the Industrial Revolution, as mechanical mills and factories became more common.
As a consequence of how production and transportation accelerated, factories can now interact with other countries, so that the economy became global.
For a short time we lived quietly. But this could not last. White men had found gold in the mountains . . . . They stole a great many horses from us . . . . The white men told lies for each other. They drove off a great many of our cattle. Some white men branded our young cattle so they could claim them. We had no friends who would plead our cause before the law councils. . . . I labored hard to avoid trouble and bloodshed. We gave up some of our country to the white men, thinking that then we could have peace. We were mistaken.
–Chief Joseph,
Nez Perce
Which statement best sums up Chief Joseph’s point of view?
OThe arrival of settlers meant his people could live in peace.
OIt is wrong to steal horses or to brand cattle that are young.
OThe Nez Perces learned a great deal from the newcomers.
OIt was a mistake to welcome the Americans to Nez Perce land.